In Flanders Fields Museum - Ypres
In late October 1914 the Belgian Army flooded the Yser Plain to hinder the advance of the Germans along the North Sea coast. This event led to the gradual establishment of a front as each side dug-in and prepared for a long stand-off. A salient formed in the German line around the rich cloth-weaving city of Ypres. The scene of five bloody battles through the course of the war, Ypres came to be seen as a martyred city and a symbol of the Allies' resistance to the German invader.
The Germans opened the second Battle of Ypres on 22 April 1915 with a poison gas attack, the first in history. It was also the first ever use of a weapon of mass destruction and it spread panic among the troops and killed thousands, mostly French and North-African soldiers. The third battle, the most murderous, was opened by the British Army in the summer of 1917 and came to a halt one hundred days later at Passchendaele. Ypres was finally liberated in September 1918. In total, the fighting around Ypres caused half a million deaths among the ranks of the German and Allied Armies. Their sacrifice is commemorated in more than 140 war cemeteries and memorials along the front, such as the Ypres Menin Gate Memorial erected in honour of the 54,360 soldiers of the British Army who were lost in action.
The Ypres Salient
It was here that Canadian Lieutenant John McCrae buried a close friend, an event which was to become the inspiration for his famous poem In Flanders Fields. The title of his poem has since provided the name for Ypres' First World War Museum. Housed in the Cloth Hall, the current museum building is a replica of the 18th century edifice which was destroyed in the fighting.
The In Flanders Fields Museum tells the story of the Great War and the martyred city of Ypres through the eyes of a soldier and a civilian of the period.
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: Lakenhalle - Halle aux Draps - Grote Markt 34 - 8900 YPRES (IEPER)
Contact: "IN FLANDERS FIELDS" MUSEUM
Call: +32 (0)57 239 220
Website: www.inflandersfields.be

























































































































































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