7
Educatief Pakket In Flanders Fields Museum - Ieperboog Noord Bus YPRES SALIENT North 1 Dear student, This worksheet is meant to allow you to pause for a moment longer by certain items in the museum. This doesn’t mean you cannot look around at other objects, stories or themes in the museum - on the contrary! You can take photos in the museum as long as you don’t use flash. BATTLE OF THE YSER – YPRES I After the fall of Antwerp (7-10 october 1914) the war shifted to the ‘Westhoek’. Here the war movement stranded. During the bus tour, we will drive through the northern part of the Ypres Salient. You can see how it was formed here (10). Question: Which army or armies took up the defence of Ypres at the end of November 1914? YPRES IN RUINS Task: Discover the link between the bell and Jean Marie Le Bonhomme. During the excursion we visit ‘Carrefour des Roses’, where the story of Jean Marie will be told. Worksheets In Flanders Fields Museum - Ypres Salient North Bus + Walk

BATTLE OF THE YSER – YPRES I - In Flanders Fields … · soldiers from the Great War during the construction of the industrial estate... YPRES, CITY OF PEACE The war that never

  • Upload
    ngocong

  • View
    222

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

1

Educ

atie

f Pak

ket I

n Fl

ande

rs F

ield

s M

useu

m -

Iepe

rboo

g N

oord

Bus

YPRES SALIENTNorth

1

Dear student, This worksheet is meant to allow you to pause for a moment longer by certain items in the museum. This doesn’t mean you cannot look around at other objects, stories or themes in the museum - on the contrary! You can take photos in the museum as long as you don’t use flash.

BATTLE OF THE YSER – YPRES I After the fall of Antwerp (7-10 october 1914) the war shifted to the ‘Westhoek’. Here the war movement stranded.

During the bus tour, we will drive through the northern part of the Ypres Salient. You can see how it was formed here (10).

Question: Which army or armies took up the defence of Ypres at the end of November 1914?

YPRES IN RUINS

Task: Discover the link between the bell and Jean Marie Le Bonhomme.

During the excursion we visit ‘Carrefour des Roses’, where the story of Jean Marie will be told.

Wor

kshe

ets

In F

land

ers

Fiel

ds M

useu

m -

Ypre

s Sa

lient

Nor

th B

us +

Wal

k

12

Wor

kshe

ets

In F

land

ers

Fiel

ds M

useu

m -

Ypre

s Sa

lient

Nor

th B

us +

Wal

k

YPRES IIIn order to get the front moving again, the military sought new weapons to break through the lines. Scientists such as the German chemist Fritz Haber, who made possible large-scale attacks using gas from 1915 onwards, aided them in their efforts. Gas was used on the front for the first time at Ypres This attack marked the beginning of the Second Battle of Ypres, which resulted in more than 40 000 fatalities in around a month’s time. Willi Siebert witnessed the ‘first gas attack’ on 22 April 1915.

Task: Listen to their stories. Question: Do you agree with Fritz Haber’s opinion?

Task: Find the name and function of this object.

During the tour, we will see this on location.

13

Wor

kshe

ets

In F

land

ers

Fiel

ds M

useu

m -

Ypre

s Sa

lient

Nor

th B

us +

Wal

k

YPRES SALIENTHere you see a representation of the Ypres Salient in a contemporary landscape.

Question: Which colour is used to represent the German front lines?

‘I am quite well…’ wrote Charles Snelling to his wife and daughter on his field service postcard.

Task: Find out how the story ended.

During the tour we will pause at the Ledwidge Memorial to learn about the ‘Irish story’ of the Great War.

14

Wor

kshe

ets

In F

land

ers

Fiel

ds M

useu

m -

Ypre

s Sa

lient

Nor

th B

us +

Wal

k

THE TRENCH WAR THE UNDERGROUND WARTrenches were zigzag-shaped to limit damage by a direct strike or attack. Barbed wire barricades were placed in front of and between the lines. To keep the trenches as dry as possible, wooden walkways were laid on the ground, and from 1916 onwards in combination with wooden A-frames when possible. Shelters were dug out here and there along the lines, and later bunkers were built.

Question: Do you recognise all the objects in the display case? If not: Describe, draw or photograph one of them and ask additional information from the guide at this location during the tour.

YPRES IIIAfter the failure of the French army in France in the spring of 1917, British commander Sir Douglas Haig decided to make an attempt at breaking through the Ypres Salient to reach the coast. The bloody offensive lasted a hundred days and took place in terrain that was often impassable by artillery fire and rain; the ‘prize’ was a ridge called Passendale (a target that should have fallen within 72 hours, according to plan) that was only cleared after five months. A total of more than 100 000 deaths and many wounded on the allied side alone received sharp criticism, even among the allies’ own ranks. Look at the Third Battle of Ypres through the eyes of Ellen Newbold La Motte, Enid Bagnold and Harvey Cushing.

Question: Which account touches you most?

15

Wor

kshe

ets

In F

land

ers

Fiel

ds M

useu

m -

Ypre

s Sa

lient

Nor

th B

us +

Wal

k

IN FLANDERS EARTHThe war may have vanished in time, but thousands of aerial photos taken during the war bring it back to life in an instant.

Task: Find the canal that runs from Ypres to Boezinge. Place the historial photos in the contemporary landscape and see how the landscape has changed.

16

Wor

kshe

ets

In F

land

ers

Fiel

ds M

useu

m -

Ypre

s Sa

lient

Nor

th B

us +

Wal

k

COMMEMORATIONOf the nearly ten million who died, more than 550 000 died in the Westhoek alone. Those who remained lived with scars on body and soul, with loss and disullusionment. Those who returned to the region in order to start life anew built their lives in an environment that even today is dedicated to the idea of commemoration. Every age adds its own commemoration. What we contribute today is virtual and international, transcending the limits of our own

culture. War is reduced to its foundation: ‘loss’.

‘The List of Names’ is a list on which there is room for citizens and soldiers alike, regardless of their nationality or whether they were friends or former enemies, both for Belgians who perished their own country and non-Belgians who died here or were fatally wounded here and died elsewhere.

Task: Add your own name to the ‘List of Names’. How many people share your name?

17

Wor

kshe

ets

In F

land

ers

Fiel

ds M

useu

m -

Ypre

s Sa

lient

Nor

th B

us +

Wal

k

THE LAST WITNESS“We shiver in the chill November wind, but most of all at the thought of how terrible his appearance must have been when his mates saw him, with torn flesh, blood and entrails…” Koen Koch, while digging up body no. 206 at the industrial estate...

Our walk passes through the trajectory where archaeologists found more than 200 bodies of soldiers from the Great War during the construction of the industrial estate...

YPRES, CITY OF PEACEThe war that never ends... On 11 November 1918, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George declared: ‘At eleven o’clock this morning came to an end the cruellest and most terrible war that has ever scourged mankind. I hope we may say that thus, this fateful morning, came to an end all wars’. A vain hope... if you look at it that way...

Question:Whichconflictbrokeout in the year of your birth?

And yet... And yet we cannot leave it for what it is. We still believe things can be different. For this reason, the city of Ypres awards the ‘Peace Prize’ every three years. And everyone who has made an effort to combat feeling of hate and revenge among (former) enemies and to lay the foundations of peaceful cooperation through reconciliation, forgiveness and compassion is eligible for the award.

Question: Who, in your opinion, should be considered for the Peace Prize? Mail your answer to [email protected]