Construction of the monument octobre 1914 - juin 1916 (≈ 1915)
Period of lull on the Somme front.
3 juillet 1916
French Conquest
French Conquest 3 juillet 1916 (≈ 1916)
Flaucourt taken over by colonial troops.
11 novembre 1918
Decommissioning of the cemetery
Decommissioning of the cemetery 11 novembre 1918 (≈ 1918)
End of war, abandonment of site.
23 novembre 1999
Registration for historical monuments
Registration for historical monuments 23 novembre 1999 (≈ 1999)
Official protection of the monument.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
German monument (Box ZH 53): inscription by order of 23 November 1999
Key figures
Information non disponible - No character cited
The source text does not mention any specific actors.
Origin and history
The German monument of Flaucourt, located in the Somme department near Peronne, is a unique vestige of the First World War. Built between October 1914 and the end of June 1916, it marked a period of relative lull on the front of the Somme, before the French troops regained the village on 3 July 1916. This monument, originally part of a German military cemetery, is one of the few to have survived the destructive fighting of 1916 and 1918.
The monument is distinguished by its architectural simplicity: a wall made of local bricks, alternating breakdowns and ends, surmounted by a triangular gable. A central plate bears the inscription "ZUR EHRE DER FÜR KAISER UND REICH GEFALLENEN SÖHNE DEUTSCHLANDS" (in honor of the sons of Germany fallen for the Kaiser and Reich). A patted cross engraved in a recess, now partially illegible, completes this sober but symbolic commemorative device.
After the 1918 Armistice, the cemetery was decommissioned, but the monument, spared, was inscribed in the historic monuments by order of 23 November 1999. Its present state, degraded, reflects the vicissitudes of a century of partial abandonment. Located back from the Biaches road, at the exit of the village, it bears witness to the memory of the German soldiers who died during this conflict, in a landscape marked by the battles of the Somme.
The rarity of this monument is explained by the systematic destruction of the German memorial buildings during the Allied offensives, notably during the Battle of the Somme (1916) and the Offensive of the Hundred Days (1918). Its architecture, inspired by local traditions (bricks, picker knives), makes it a unique example of Germanic military funeral heritage in France. Today, it is an ambiguous place of memory, both a trace of an enemy yesterday and a universal witness to the horrors of war.
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