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HomeNEWSWORLD NEWSRelatives and royals mark WWI Passchendaele centenary

Relatives and royals mark WWI Passchendaele centenary

YPRES, BELGIUM, AFP, 31 July 2017  – Britain’s Prince Charles hailed the “courage and bravery” of soldiers who fought at Passchendaele as he led thousands of their descendants at centenary tributes for one of World War I’s bloodiest battles.


In a solemn ceremony at the huge Tyne Cot cemetery in Belgium, where 11,961 victims of the battle were laid to rest, British and Belgian royals stood side by side to honour those who fell.


Three months of fighting to gain the Flanders village of Passchendaele in horrific muddy conditions claimed around half a million allied and German casualties, for the gain of only a few miles of territory.


“We rememember it not only for the rain that fell, the mud that weighed down the living and swallowed the dead, but also for the courage and bravery of the men who fought here,” a solemn Charles told the ceremony.


“Drawn from many nations, we come together in their resting place… to promise that we will never forget,” the heir to the British throne said, wearing a beige summer suit with a red poppy on his lapel.


Descendants of the combatants also read out solemn tributes to those who died, standing amid the white headstones etched with names from Britain and Commonwealth countries like South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.


“My great, great uncle and namesake Sergeant William Rhodes, Cheshire Regiment, awarded the distinguished conduct medal, killed in action 31 July 1917, one hundred years ago today,” his descendant said.


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