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  1. The Australian names data was received from the Australian War Memorial’s First World War Roll of Honour as of September 2019. The Memorial continues to amend the Roll of Honour — correcting errors on the database and bronze panels, including aliases; adding missing data to the database (such as cause of death or age at death, which was not provided at the time of compiling the Roll); and ...

  2. The Roll of Honour begins on D-Day, 6 June 1944, and ends on 31 August 1944. There is no single ‘official’ date for the end of the Battle of Normandy, but there are several dates that are often used. These include the final Allied encirclement of German forces in Normandy on 21 August (the closure of the Falaise Pocket), the liberation of ...

  3. Registration of the War Dead 1914-1918. Photograph taken by a German soldier in April 1915 in captured French trenches on the battlefield north of Ypres. The cross for the battlefield burial simply says “Français” - “French”. (1) The scale of casualties in the First World War was unprecedented. Thousands of soldiers were being buried ...

  4. British soldiers' effects, 1901-60. The National Army Museum holds the soldiers’ effects ledgers that were created by the War Office to record the monies owing to those who died while serving in the British Army. These records run from 1901 to 1960, covering the latter stages of the Boer War and, of course, both World Wars.

  5. Check out all of these digitized records in Collection Search. If you create an account on our website, you can save records of interest. Enter one or more search terms. You don't need to fill in all the boxes. Wildcard character: * (e.g. John* for Johns, Johnsen, Johnson, Johnston, etc.) Surname.

  6. 17 de nov. de 2014 · The Indians were also commemorated on the Western Front itself. There are many Indian names on the Menin Gate at Ypres. 100 years after the First World War, the Indian Army’s significant role was acknowledged by British. The British army has honoured the contribution made by Sikh soldiers during World War One. SOURCE:

  7. In August 2013 Her Majesty’s Court and Tribunal Service (HMCTS) announced the publication online of thousands of wills written by British soldiers who had lost their lives in the First World War. The collection does, in fact, consist of the wills of soldiers dating from 1850-1986.