National Necropolis of Plaine-de-Walsch
La nécropole nationale de Plaine-de-Walsch. © ECPAD
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The Plaine-de-Walsch National Necropolis contains the bodies of 361 Frenchmen, including 319 who were previously buried in two ossuaries. After the battle of Sarrebourg (August 1914), thousands of bodies were strewn across the battlefield. With the officially recorded loss of 20,000 men, 20 August 1914 remains the deadliest single day of the First World War.
To prevent epidemics, the burial of these victims was of major importance. So, the German army requisitioned all men aged 16 to 60 to act with speed to bring the remains of all those killed in the sector to this cemetery. Without always stopping to identify the bodies, these men collected the fallen and buried them in deep common graves.
In 1924, under the supervision of the French War Graves Department, other bodies from the provisional cemeteries of Schneckenbusch, Troisfontaines, Hommarting, and Niderviller were transferred to this site.
Nearby is a German cemetery containing the remains of 277 German soldiers, most of whom also fell on 20 August 1914.
Practical information
Plaine-de-Walsch
Au sud-est de Sarrebourg, D 96
Visites libres toute l’année
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Comité départemental du tourisme de la Moselle
2-4, rue du Pont Moreau
57003 Metz Cedex 01
Tél. : 03 87 37 57 80