Sept-Saulx French national war cemetery
La nécropole nationale de Sept-Saulx. © ECPAD
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Founded in 1915 during the military operations in Champagne, the national war cemetery of Sept-Saulx brings together, under the Great War, 3,043 bodies of French soldiers and two other soldiers killed during World War II. From 1920, the bodies of soldiers began to be brought there after being exhumed from isolated graves or various temporary cemeteries in the region.
After many successful colonial campaigns, in particular in Tonkin, General Henri Van Waertmeulen led, throughout the summer of 1914, commanded a colonial regiment. Brigadier General in 1917, he commanded the 165th Infantry Division. Seriously wounded by shrapnel, he died on 16 July 1918 at the 13/20 ambulance stationed at Sept-Saulx. Without any other distinction, and thus respecting the quality of grades when faced with mass deaths, his body is buried here next to those of his men (grave 2478). Commander of the Legion of Honour, he is one of 41 Generals who died for France during the First World War and the last general officer to have been killed in 1914-1918. His name features on the war memorial erected in the church of the soldiers of Saint-Louis des Invalides (Paris).
Practical information
Sept-Saulx
À 20 km au sud-est de Reims, sur la D 57
Visites libres toute l’année
Summary
Eléments remarquables
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CRDP de Champagne-Ardennes
Centre régional de documentation pédagogique
17, boulevard de la Paix – 51063 Reims
Tél. : 03 26 49 58 58
Comité Départemental du Tourisme de la Marne
13 bis, rue Carnot
51006 Châlons-en-Champagne
Tél. : 03 26 68 37 52