Ypres

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Ypres (French, generally used in English;1 Ieper official name in the local Dutch) is a municipality located in Flanders, one of the three regions of Belgium, and in the Flemish province of West Flanders. The municipality comprises the city of Ypres and the towns of Boezinge, Dikkebus, Elverdinge, Vlamertinge, Voormezele, Zillebeke and Zuidschote. On January 1 2005 Ypres had a total population of 36,120 .The total area is 130.61 km² which gives a population density of 267.58 inhabitants per km².

File:Belfort Ieper.JPG
The Bellfry of Ypres

During the Middle Ages, Ypres was a prosperous town with a population of 80,000. It was renowned for its linen trade with England. During this time, cats, then the sign of the devil and witchcraft, were thrown off the cloth halls, to get rid of evil demons. Today, this is commemorated with the Cat Parade, a triennial parade through town, depicting the history of the cat.

The area around Ypres was the site of three major battles in World War I. Because of the fighting the town was all but obliterated with much shelling from the Germans. After the war the town was rebuilt with the main square, including the noted Cloth Hall and town hall being rebuilt as much like the original as possible. (The rest of the rebuilt town is more modern in appearance.) The Cloth Hall is today a museum dedicated to Ypres's role in the First World War.

Cloth Hall at night

Ypres these days has the title of city of peace and has a close friendship with another town on which war had a big impact; Hiroshima. The association is regarded as somewhat gruesome due to the undeniable fact that both towns witnessed mankind at its worst; Ypres was the first place where chemical warfare was employed, while Hiroshima was the ___location for the debut of nuclear warfare.

The fountain in the Grote Markt, Ieper, opposite the Cloth Hall.

World War I

 
Ruins of Ypres - 1919

In the First Battle of Ypres (October 31 to November 22, 1914) the British captured the town from the Germans. In the Second Battle of Ypres (April 22 to May 25, 1915) the Germans used poison gas for the first time on the Western Front (they had used it for the first time at the Battle of Bolimow on January 1, 1915) and captured high ground east of the town. The gas used was mustard gas also called Yperite from the name of this city

The largest, best-known, and most costly in human suffering was the Third Battle of Ypres (July 21 to November 6, 1916; also known as the Battle of Passchendaele) the British, Canadians and ANZAC forces recaptured the ridge at a terrible cost of lives.

English-speaking soldiers in that war often referred to Ypres by the (perhaps humorous) mispronunciation "Wipers".

The landscape is littered with wargraves, both of the Allied side and the Central Powers. The countryside around Ypres is featured in the famous poem by John McCrae, In Flanders Fields.

Menin Gate

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The Menin Gate

The Menin Gate Memorial in Ypres is dedicated to the fallen soldiers in the immortal Ypres Salient during the First World War who have no known graves, and whose bodies are still buried on the battlefields around Ypres. Every evening since 1928 traffic around the imposing arches of the Memorial has been stopped while the Last Post is sounded beneath the Gate. This tribute is played in honour of the memory of British Empire soldiers who fought and died there.

The ceremony was stopped by occupying German forces during the Second World War. It was resumed on the very evening of liberation — 6 September, 1944 — notwithstanding the heavy fighting that was still taking place in other parts of the town.

Quotations

"Who will remember, passing through this Gate,
The unheroic Dead who fed the guns?"
-- Siegfried Sassoon, On Passing the Menin Gate

Footnote

1 The Dutch language was restricted by the French-speaking Belgian ruling class at the time of the First World War so that as a result the French name was used by British soldiers fighting there—they however, pronounced it "Wipers," probably as a result of poor education in pronunciation of the French language rather than any deliberate humour.