Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery
  • 35 Chinese Labour Corps (back side)
  • French graves
  • American graves (near the Stone of Remembrance Plot XXXII)
Practical info
Location
Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery is located 12 kilometres west of Ieper town centre, on the Boescheepseweg, a road leading from the N308 connecting Ieper to Poperinge. From Ieper town centre the Poperingseweg (N308) is reached via Elverdingsestraat, then over two small roundabouts in the J. Capronstraat. The Poperingseweg is a continuation of the J. Capronstraat and begins after a prominent railway level crossing. On reaching Poperinge, the N308 joins the left hand turning onto the R33, Poperinge ring road. The R33 ring continues to the left hand junction with the N38 Frans- Vlaanderenweg. 800 metres along the N38 lies the left hand turning onto Lenestraat. The next immediate right hand turning leads onto Boescheepseweg. The cemetery itself is located 2 kilometres along Boescheepseweg on the right hand side of the road.
Poperinge, Poperinge
Ground - aerial
Coordinates
GPS-Reference R5870 - Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery
DMSX N 50°49'43.6'' - E002°42'03.8''
DMX N 50°49.726' - E002°42.064'
D N 50.828768° - E002.701061°
UTM 31U E 478946 N 5630826
GOOGLE EARTH 50 49.726 N, 002 42.064 E
Maps
• Mapquest
Info
During the First World War, the village of Lijssenthoek was situated on the main communication line between the Allied military bases in the rear and the Ypres battlefields. Close to the Front, but out of the extreme range of most German field artillery, it became a natural place to establish casualty clearing stations. The cemetery was first used by the French 15th Hopital D'Evacuation and in June 1915, it began to be used by casualty clearing stations of the Commonwealth forces. From April to August 1918, the casualty clearing stations fell back before the German advance and field ambulances (including a French ambulance) took their places.

The cemetery contains 9,893 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, a few of which were brought in from the battlefields after the Armistice, and 883 war graves of other nationalities, mostly French and German. It is the second largest Commonwealth cemetery in Belgium. The cemetery was designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield.

Burials (Commonwealth War Graves Commission):
  • United Kingdom: 7367
  • Canada: 1058
  • Australia: 1131
  • New Zealand: 291
  • South Africa: 29
  • Undivided India: 2
  • Other Commonwealth: 21
  • Entirely Unidentified: 3
  • Total Commonwealth: 9902
  • Other Nationalities: 884
  • Non WorldWar Dead: 1
Related links