Walking in Europe

A blog of Angus and Alison's walking tour of the Tour de Mont Blanc, Via degli Dei the Dobratsch Circuit in Carinthia, Austria, the Dolomites, Venice, and Iceland

Today was a wonderful day, long in the saddle (113kms) but very meaningful in terms of the number of memorials and stops of interest related to the Western Front. But perhaps the most impactful and emotional for me was the Verdun Douaumont Memorial. The shear numbers of young people who died was staggering: combined casualties of French and German armies are estimated to be as high as 900,000. Of those, half were deaths (so 450,000…almost half a million young lives) and the other half were injuries many of which would have no doubt caused a prolonged death of permanent injury. The Verdun Memorial is stunning and yet heart wrenching, an emotional tribute and yet a haunting and sombre marker of the terrible toll of human life that war brings. The massive ossuary building contains the unidentified remains of 160,000 combatants…160,000…

The hedge in the middle hides a whole other half of the graveyard
The ossuary contains the unidentified remains of 160,000

Passage from British WW I era poet Rupert Brooke that captures the heartbreaking loss to humanity when peoples lives are needlessly cut short by war.

I’ve added pictures to the gallery of some of the other necropoles (remembrance cemeteries) from our travels today. Just as moving in many ways. These are found in the woods and fields of where so many horrific battles took place.

Thank you Tony for this great pic that captures so much

Posted in

6 responses to “As far as the eye could see: Verdun”

  1. Gilly Avatar
    Gilly

    Oh Angus, it must be so emotional and heavy as you pedal along. The experience is no doubt sobering and I am glad you are having bright happy experiences of meeting new people. This pathway is exactly as A D Gillespie envisioned it, isn’t it?

    Like

    1. Angus Graeme Avatar
      Angus Graeme

      Yes it feels that way. One part of the route yesterday was lined with beautiful fruit trees laden with apples and pears. At one point we pulled over and had a fruit break!

      Like

  2. Rhys Avatar
    Rhys

    What an incredible journey. You are all inspiring to follow your path. They are not forgotten as you pedal back in time and connect with new found family. Rhys

    Like

  3. Rhys Avatar
    Rhys

    What a fantastic adventure Angus and team. They will not be forgotten as you pedal back in time and connect with family.

    Like

    1. Angus Graeme Avatar
      Angus Graeme

      Thanks Rhys! Yes it’s turned out to be one of those life changing events in life.

      Like

  4. Oaracle Avatar

    Such staggering numbers. “Dawn was theirs, And sunset, and colours of the earth…”

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Angus Graeme Cancel reply