Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts

Sunday, August 28, 2022

Vår Frelsers Gravelund, Oslo, Norway

[visited 20 May 2022]

One of the most notable burials in this lush, lovely cemetery in the hills above Oslo is that of painter Edvard Munch who also has his own rather incredible museum along the waterfront. 

it told you it was lush -- and a great place to sit and read or watch your baby

Munch


Hans Frederik Borgen, 1852-1907

the Hals family

Thor Hals, 1852-1924

Fanny Hals, 1859-1908


Karl Hals, 1822-1898

Olav Hals, 1853-1883

Louise Katharina No, 1830-1893

Rasmus Agerup Langaard, 1860-1908


Emil Stang, 1834-1910

Høyeraal family

Johan Sverdrup, 1816-1892

J. Løvland, 1848-1922

Rolf Wickstrøm, 1912-1941

August Martinius Oddvar, 1877-1964


Arnulf Øverland, 1889-1968

Axel Jensen, 1873-1955

Nielsen and Fabritius

Sigurd Hoel, 1890-1960

Herman Wildenvey, 1886-1959


Sunday, July 10, 2022

Cemetery in Oradour-sur-Glane, France

 [visited 15 May 2013]

On the afternoon of 10 June 1944 elements the SS Waffen panzer division Das Reich diviion swept into the town of Oradour-sur-Glane. The unit was racing towards the Normandy beaches to assist in stopping the Allied advance. For reasons that remain unclear  the Germans rounded up all the inhabitants present that day, some 642 men, women and children. 

The men were split up into several groups and herded into nearby barns where they were shot and their  bodies set on fire. 

The women and children were placed in the town church where they were machine-gunned and the bodies set on fire, many while still alive. 

Only a handful managed to escape.

Before leaving the soldiers set the town on fire and destroyed whatever they couldn’t take with them. 

At the end of the war the French government decided to leave the village as a memorial to the horrific atrocity. 

The cemetery next to the ruined village today contains an obelisk dedicated to those killed that day (see photo below). You'll note two coffin-shaped objects at the base, each covered by glass containing the bones of those who could not be identified. The photos that follow contain images of many of those who were subsequently interred or memorialized with their families, a lasting testament to those souls who perished that terrible afternoon. . .

For a remarkably thorough and exhaustive discussion of that day you will want to visit:  https://www.oradour.info/.

entrance


memorial with the back wall containing the names of those who died on 10 June 1944

one of the two ossuaries





































Souviens-toi!

Bluett family in Holcomb Rogus Chapel

 [ large photos courtesy of Pauline Prosser; small closeups courtesy of Wikipedia. ].  Buried in the small chapel of Hlcomb Rogus, Devon is ...