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The largest British war cemetery in the world, Tyne Cot CWGC Cemetery was designed by Sir Herbert Baker. 11,908 graves are registered within Tyne Cot, making it a somewhat impersonal war cemetery: the sheer number of graves make it perhaps difficult to take in.
Of this total 70% are unknown. On the wall at the back of the cemetery are the names of 34,927 soldiers who have no known grave and died from August 1917 to the end of the war - a continuation of the names inscribed on the Menin Gate.
Inside the cemetery two mourning angels kneel on top of dome-covered pavilions at either end of the memorial wall, highlighting the harrowing nature of the conflict in this area, Passchendaele.
The two pavilions were built over German blockhouses.
Two remaining German blockhouses can be seen, one to the right of the entrance gate (through which the Cross of Sacrifice can be framed and is much photographed; this was, incidentally, built over the remains of a German pillbox at the suggestion of King George V), and the other to the left. Each are surrounded by poplars.
Copyright Geoff Delderfield - No reproduction without permission
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