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11/11/2013

95 ans plus tard…

Découvrez les « Western Front Photographies » de Michael St.Maur Sheil,  

En cliquant ici, ici et/ou ici 

 

The Fort de Douaument - a defence near Verdun, France which saw one million casualties in the Great War.jpg

Grave of French soldier Edouard Ivaldi in Champagne. This is the only grave left from WW1 and still has Ivaldi's helmet marking the spot he fell in 1917.jpg

British photographer Michael St Maur Sheil's picture of a World War I observation post near Hebuterne, south of Dunkirk.jpgLochnagar Crater at the Somme as it is today. The picture is part of a collection of World War One landscapes which still bear the signs of war damage.jpg

The still pockmarked landscape of Beaumont Hamel on the Somme where the Newfoundland Regiment were decimated by German machine guns.jpg

German cemetery on the battlefield of Tete des Faux - the highest point on the Western Front. 10 million soldiers died in the conflict almost 100 years ago.jpg

Original site of the village of Butte de Vaquois which was destroyed between Feb 1915 and Feb 1918. American forces captured the hill on Sept 26 1918.jpg

Haunting picture of a landscape near Verdun, France still shows the pockmarks and craters made in the Great War almost 100 years ago.jpg

Ruins The remains of the Chateau de Soupir after the village in northern France was cleared by elite British unit the Brigade of Guards on the 14th September 1914.jpg