Vimy Ridge nrArras in France is where 11000 Canadians were killed or wounded in the 1st WW war, angel looks over the battlefield
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Tom Hanley / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
A2XA0KFile size:
50.1 MB (2.3 MB Compressed download)Releases:
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4180 x 4193 px | 35.4 x 35.5 cm | 13.9 x 14 inches | 300dpiLocation:
Vimy Ridge. FranceMore information:
Vimy Ridge is the place on the first world war battlefields where Canadian soldiers are remembered. They fought their major battle here between the ninth and fourteenth April 1917, they lost 3, 498 Killed and 7, 104 Wounded in fighting to gain Hill 145 and so break the Germans The Hindenburg Line. It was said to be a turning point in the war when the Canadian's defeated the Bavarian soldiers of Crown Prince Rupprecht's army. So much so that it earned the Canadians a seat at the Peace talks held at Versailles. After the war a massive memorial was raised here to the whole Canadian army, the architect was Edwin Lutyen, and opened in 1936 by King Edward VIII. The picture shows a woman weeping across the fields in the direction of Lens.