France

La Broque

Total Occupation: 1.933 fatalities

Total Occupation: 1.933 fatalities

Contact

Rue de Fréconrupt

France


Open all year round

This war cemetery is home to 1,933 German war dead from the First World War. Département Bas-Rhin The German military cemetery at La Broque (in the commune of Schirmeck) was established by the French military authorities in 1920 as a collective cemetery for German casualties. The recovery of the dead from their provisional graves, often created during the fighting, in the areas of 37 communes or districts took place in the years up to 1924. The majority of those now resting here lost their lives in mid-August 1914 during the first battles for the border crossings and in the course of the "Battle of Lorraine", when German troops went on the counter-offensive after a French attack from August 20, in the course of which they reached the gates of Nancy. However, after losing the Battle of the Marne, they were forced to retreat back to the former imperial border. Most of the dead belonged to Bavarian regiments, but there were also regiments from Baden, Württemberg, Hesse, Thuringia and Brandenburg. Repair work between the wars The Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge e. V. (German War Graves Commission) carried out the first work to improve the condition of the cemetery on the basis of an agreement reached with the French military authorities in 1926. In addition to planting trees, hedges and shrubs, the cemetery was planted with greenery, the communal grave was surrounded by a natural stone wall, the entrance was landscaped and - as a central point - a high cross made of oak was erected. However, the problem of permanently marking the graves remained unresolved due to a lack of foreign currency and the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939. Final design Following the conclusion of the Franco-German War Graves Agreement on July 19, 1966, the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge e.V. - with financial support from the German government - was able to carry out the final design of the German military cemeteries of the Second World War in France. Prior to this, young helpers from the Volksbund had already begun the preliminary gardening work. in 1980, the previous temporary wooden grave markers were replaced by metal crosses with the names and dates of those buried here cast into them. Young helpers from the Volksbund were also involved here. They moved the concrete foundations, which weighed 35 kilograms and were transported by the German Armed Forces, as bases for the crosses. 636 war dead were given individual graves; two of them remain unknown. A total of 1,297 war dead rest in two common graves. Of these, 1,177 remain unidentified. The entire site was given a thorough landscaping overhaul, including the redesign of the entrance area. A wrought-iron gate between natural stone wing walls and a high cross made of forged steel characterize the image of the cemetery. Maintenance: The cemetery is constantly maintained by the Volksbund's maintenance service.