Ypres Menin Gate Memorial
Each evening at 8 o'clock buglers play the Last Post at Menin Gate. This short piece of music, used by the British Army to mark the end of the day, has been played there everyday since 1928 to bid farewell to those who died in the Great War. Only during the German Occupation of the Second World War has this ritual been interrupted.
The memorial stands at the entrance to the town on the road to Menin where the ramparts once stood. The monumental arch on the banks of the moat was erected in memory of the old gate through which hundreds of thousands of soldiers passed on the road to the nearby battlefields. The lions atop the memorial continue to gaze in their direction.
Thousands passed through the Menin Gate on the road to battle
Designed by the Architect Sir Reginald Blomfield, Menin Gate was inaugurated in 1927 by the 'soldier king' Albert I of Belgium and Field Marshal Herbert Plumer. The latter made his name in the Victory of Messines Ridge in June 1917.
Between October 1914 and October 1918 no less than five major battles bloodied the soil of the Ypres Salient, including the battle of April 1915 which saw the first gas attack in history. The fighting around Ypres resulted in a total of 500,000 casualties from fifteen nations, both sides included. The Commonwealth alone suffered 185,000 losses on Belgian soil, of which nearly 100,000 have no known grave. Ypres Menin Gate Memorial bears the names of 54,382 soldiers who died before 16 August 1917, except for New Zealand soldiers who are commemorated at the Tyne Cot Memorial in Passchendaele. Today the area of the Ypres Salient is home to about 150 military cemeteries.
On the other side of the gate the road leads to the main square of Ypres and the famous Cloth Hall which today houses the 'In Flanders Fields' Museum. The museum tells the story of soldiers and civilians and how they lived through the terrible years of the Great War.
Related sites
Practical information
Map:
Find out about access, tourist offices and a selection of quality accommodation and restaurants around the site.
Contact details
Address: YPRES MENIN GATE MEMORIAL - Meensestraat - 8900 YPRES (IEPER)
Contact: OFFICE DU TOURISME D'YPRES
Call: +32 (0)57 239 220
Website: www.ieper.be

























































































































































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