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The national necropolis of Betz

La nécropole nationale de Betz. © ECPAD

 

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Situated a few kilometres from Acy-le-Multien, the national necropolis of Betz-Montrolles contains the bodies of 44 soldiers who died for France, including 21 in an ossuary. The other combatants, most of whom fell during the Battle of the Matz in June 1918 and were repatriated in ambulance 5/1 from Betz, lie in individual graves.

Saluting the memory of the soldiers of the Army of Paris who fought on the battlefields of the Ourcq, a monument / ossuary preserves the remains of combatants killed between 7th and 9th September 1914 in the vicinity of the Bois de Montrolles.

 

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Betz
Au sud-ouest de Villers-Cotterêts, D 332

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Senlis French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Senlis. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Senlis contains the remains of soldiers killed during the major offensives of the spring of 1918. Created in June 1918, close to the military hospital, this war cemetery was extended until 1921 to hold the remains of other soldiers initially buried in temporary military cemeteries of Ognon, Gouvieux, Chantilly and Vineuil. In total there are 1,146 French soldiers buried here, along with four soldiers who died in May 1940 or in 1944. Two ossuaries hold the remains of 78 soldiers. 136 British soldiers are also buried at this site.

 

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Senlis
Rue aux Chevaux

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Verberie National Cemetery

Nécropole nationale de Verberie. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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The Verberie National Cemetery holds the bodies of soldiers who died for France during battle in the Oise department.

Built in 1918, this cemetery was developed from 1921 to 1934 to include bodies exhumed from temporary cemeteries in the department and again from 1941 to 1951 to rebury the bodies of soldiers who died during WWII. Nearly 2,600 bodies are buried there, including over 2,500 French soldiers in two ossuaries. In WWI, 56 British soldiers were buried there and in WWII, 41 French soldiers were buried in individual graves.

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Verberie
À 15 km au sud-ouest de Compiègne Rue des Moulins (à côté du cimetière communal de Verberie)

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Compiègne National Cemetery

Compiègne-Royallieu National Cemetery. Source: MINDEF/SGA/DMPA/ONACVG

 

Click here to view the cemetery's information panel vignette Royallieu

 

Compiègne-Royallieu National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France after succumbing to their wounds in the town’s hospitals. Backing onto Compiègne South cemetery, this necropolis was established in 1921. It is located on the site of the former military cemetery attached to temporary military hospital No 16. In 1916, bodies exhumed from other cemeteries in the Oise were also brought to rest here. The cemetery holds nearly 3 400 bodies, including, from the First World War, 3 300 French (264 in two ossuaries), 81 British, 11 Russians, 1 Belgian and a German soldier buried in an ossuary, together with 4 Frenchmen killed during the Second World War.

 

The Battles of the Oise, 1914-18

In August 1914, as set out in the Schlieffen Plan, German troops entered Belgium and marched on Paris. They crossed the Oise and the Aisne before being stopped by the French counter-offensive on the Marne. The two armies then established a front from Verdun to Dunkirk; the right bank of the Oise was occupied by the Germans, while fierce fighting took place on the left bank, with the zouave regiments particularly distinguishing themselves.

For three years, from September 1914 to March 1917, the front didn’t budge. Noyon came under one of the strictest occupations, and the Oise saw no major military operations; it was a “quiet” sector. The French and German troops consolidated their positions, occupying underground quarries, which they decorated and carved.


At the end of 1916, the German command wanted to strengthen the front, and therefore decided to abandon the Noyon sector. Applying a scorched earth policy, the Germans retreated to the Hindenburg Line, which they had just established, thereby limiting the effects of an Allied offensive in this sector. By mid-March 1917, the area was liberated, but in ruins: the houses had been dynamited, the fields flooded, and the bridges and junctions destroyed.


However, the respite was short-lived. Less than a year later, 27 German divisions broke through the British front across 80 km and swept towards Noyon which, on 25 March 1918, found itself occupied once again. Entrenched on Mont Renaud, overlooking the town, the French drove back 23 German attacks, and for over a month shelled the enemy positions. Spared up until now, Noyon was completely destroyed.


On 9 June 1918, the German command ordered a fresh offensive. The Oise then became the scene of a bitter struggle, known as the Battle of Matz, during which the two enemy armies employed heavy artillery and tanks without reserve. Over the first few days, the German army made rapid progress. But due to major losses, their advance was halted at Compiègne. Led by General Mangin, the French army regained the initiative, liberating the Thiescourt massif and crossing the River Divette. On 30 August, Noyon was liberated for good.


The first department on the front line to come back under French control, the Oise has preserved the memory of that bitter fighting and, with the signing of the Armistice on 11 November 1918 in the forest of Rethondes, it remains one of the symbols of the Great War.

The town of Compiègne in the Great War

A town emblematic of First World War remembrance, where the Armistice was signed on 11 November 1918, from the early days of the war, soldiers of the British Expeditionary Force were stationed at Compiègne. Occupied temporarily by the Germans, the town was abandoned at the end of the Battle of the Marne. Located 12 km from the front, Compiègne became a vital link in the chain of medical attention provided to French Army casualties. A major hospital complex in the battle zone, it had many of its public buildings requisitioned, including Saint Joseph’s boarding school and the barracks of the 54th Infantry Regiment at Royallieu. The newly built barrack buildings could accommodate large numbers of wounded. Evacuated in June 1918, this medical complex was re-established and went on to function until the end of the war.


Threatened with enemy bombing from the air, in 1917 Compiègne became home to the French General Headquarters. In March 1918, due to the last major German offensives, the town came under threat once more and most of its population left. A strategic point on the route to Paris, the pressure from the enemy was entirely lifted from Compiègne in June 1918.

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Compiègne

Rémy National Military Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Rémy. © ECPAD

 

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Rémy National Military Cemetery contains the remains of soldiers who died during various First World War operations that took place in Oise, mainly those in 1918. It was created in 1921 for the burial of soldiers originally laid to rest in isolated graves or in temporary cemeteries in Oise, and it now contains the bodies of 1,828 French soldiers, including six killed in battle in June 1940. The mortal remains of 52 civilians are also buried in the cemetery. Due to the German invasion, a large number of civilians fled Somme and Aisne to seek refuge in neighbouring departments. Some of them settled in Villers-sous-Coudon, where around fifty died of natural causes or sickness at ambulance centre 247 in 1917.

 

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Remy

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Catenoy National Cemetery

Catenoy National Cemetery. © ECPAD

 

Click here  to view the cemetery’s information panel vignette Catenoy

 

Catenoy National Cemetery contains the remains of French soldiers killed in the battles of the Oise. Laid out in 1921, it holds bodies exhumed from the department’s military cemeteries in Catenoy, Breuil-le-Sec, Épineuse, Angicourt, Mouy, Saint-Rémy, Litz and Plessis-Villette. In 1965 and 1970, bodies exhumed from the municipal military cemeteries of Clermont and Creil were also buried here. The cemetery contains the bodies of nearly 1 800 soldiers killed in the Great War, including two pilots: one Australian, killed on 4 June 1918, and one British, killed on 7 June 1918. One Russian and four French soldiers killed in the Second World War are also laid to rest here.

 

The Battles of the Oise, 1914-18

In August 1914, as set out in the Schlieffen Plan, German troops entered Belgium and marched on Paris. They crossed the Oise and the Aisne before being stopped by the French counter-offensive on the Marne. The two armies then established a front from Verdun to Dunkirk; the right bank of the Oise was occupied by the Germans, while fierce fighting took place on the left bank, with the zouave regiments particularly distinguishing themselves.

For three years, from September 1914 to March 1917, the front didn’t budge. Noyon came under one of the strictest occupations, and the Oise saw no major military operations; it was a “quiet” sector. The French and German troops consolidated their positions, occupying underground quarries, which they decorated and carved.

At the end of 1916, the German command wanted to strengthen the front, and therefore decided to abandon the Noyon sector. Applying a scorched earth policy, the Germans retreated to the Hindenburg Line, which they had just established, thereby limiting the effects of an Allied offensive in this sector. By mid-March 1917, the area was liberated, but in ruins: the houses had been dynamited, the fields flooded, and the bridges and junctions destroyed.

However, the respite was short-lived. Less than a year later, 27 German divisions broke through the British front across 80 km and swept towards Noyon which, on 25 March 1918, found itself occupied once again. Entrenched on Mont Renaud, overlooking the town, the French drove back 23 German attacks, and for over a month shelled the enemy positions. Spared up until now, Noyon was completely destroyed.

On 9 June 1918, the German command ordered a fresh offensive. The Oise then became the scene of a bitter struggle, known as the Battle of Matz, during which the two enemy armies employed heavy artillery and tanks without reserve. Over the first few days, the German army made rapid progress. But due to major losses, their advance was halted at Compiègne. Led by General Mangin, the French army regained the initiative, liberating the Thiescourt massif and crossing the River Divette. On 30 August, Noyon was liberated for good.

The first department on the front line to come back under French control, the Oise has preserved the memory of that bitter fighting and, with the signing of the Armistice on 11 November 1918 in the forest of Rethondes, it became one of the symbols of the Great War.

 

Catenoy, military hospital no 36

For the duration of the war, the village of Catenoy was a key site for the stationing of troops by the French Army. The writers Roland Dorgelès and Charles Péguy stayed here before going to the front. 

However, in January 1918, the 3rd Army, which had its command in Clermont and the headquarters of its medical service in Nointel, decided to install a military hospital there.  Ever increasing numbers of wounded were arriving each day, and required triage, treatment and evacuation to more appropriate care facilities. From 8 April 1918, the village was home to a military hospital with 1 500 beds (900 for the wounded, 400 for the gassed and sick, and 200 for the lame). The proximity of the N31 road and the Beauvais-Compiègne railway line made for the efficient treatment and rapid evacuation of the wounded who flooded in from the front. By the end of May, the hospital was up and running. Within less than ten days, it had received some 2 500 sick and wounded men, and contributed to 15 ambulance trains.

During the Battle of Matz, from 9 to 14 June, Catenoy hospital, with its 12 surgical teams, received a continuous stream of ambulances from the battlefield. Stretchers piled up in the triage shelters. Surgical staff worked tirelessly, attending to each of the wounded in turn and carrying out more than 700 serious operations in the two operating wings. Over 5 000 soldiers passed through the hospital, which was the 3rd Army’s largest. Owing to the dedication of chaplain Père Fonteny, some of the soldiers who did not survive their wounds are laid to rest in Catenoy National Cemetery.

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Catenoy

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Marissel French national war cemetery at Beauvais

La nécropole nationale de Marissel. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Marissel contains the remains of soldiers who died from their wounds in the military hospitals of the town during the major offensives of the spring of 1918. Created in 1922, this site was extended in 1935 and 1952 to hold the bodies of other soldiers initially buried in temporary military cemeteries in the region. At this site, 1,081 soldiers are buried, ten of which were laid to rest in an ossuary, as well as 19 British servicemen and one Belgian soldier. Alongside these men are buried, from the Second World War, 95 French soldiers, 158 British, five Soviets, one Polish and eight unknown French civilians.

 

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Beauvais

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The Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt. © ECPAD

 

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Created in 1950, the Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt national cemetery is a combined cemetery, for on that date the remains of French soldiers who had died for their country during the French campaign (May-June 1940) and during the fighting for national liberation (1944-1945) were brought together. As a result of the Second World War, there are 2,106 soldiers and resistance fighters, as well as three Poles, a Spaniard and a Romanian.

This site was developed from 1972 to 1974 in order to welcome the mortal remains of 126 soldiers from the Great War. All of the bodies - including those from the Great War - were exhumed in the Eure, Oise, Somme and Seine-Maritime departments. The layout of this site thus reflects its history, since the 1939-1945 graves are set out in a semi-circle at the entrance, whilst those from 1914-1918 are aligned at the rear of the cemetery.

Among the 2,237 soldiers who lie here are the bodies of Major Bouquet, Captain Speckel and the infantrymen Lena Faya and Aka Tano, who were summarily executed in June 1940 in the Bois d'Eraines. The remains of the liner Meknès were also brought to the Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt cemetery. On 24 July 1940 this ship was torpedoed at sea, leaving 430 dead - including Christian Werno.

 

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Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt
Au nord de Compiègne, N 32

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Thiescourt National Military Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Thiescourt. © ECPAD

 

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Thiescourt National Military Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died during the various battles in Oise between 1914 and 1918. Created when the fighting stopped in 1918, this cemetery was expanded in 1920 and 1921 to take the bodies of other soldiers exhumed from isolated graves or various temporary cemeteries in the Oise department. It contains the bodies of 1,258 French soldiers, 711 of which are laid to rest in individual graves. Two ossuaries hold the mortal remains of 547 unknown soldiers.

Among the soldiers buried here is a soldier who died for France in 1939-1945.

Next to this cemetery is a German cemetery created in 1920, containing the remains of 1,095 German soldiers, 388 of them in two ossuaries. Buried with these soldiers are four British soldiers, two of them officers from the Royal Air Force (RAF), and two French soldiers.

 

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Thiescourt

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Vignemont National Military Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Vignemont. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Vignemont National Military Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Battle of Matz in June 1918. Created at the end of the war, this cemetery was expanded in 1919 and 1921 to take the bodies of other soldiers exhumed from isolated graves or temporary cemeteries in the area. The cemetery contains the bodies of 3,108 French soldiers, 2,153 of them buried in individual graves. Two ossuaries hold the mortal remains of 955 soldiers. The cemetery also contains the graves of eight British soldiers who died during the 2nd Battle of the Somme in 1918.

A German cemetery next to this site, created at the same time as the French military cemetery, contains 5,333 bodies, 3,802 of them in individual graves.

 

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Vignemont
À 13 km au nord de Compiègne, D 41

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