Azmak Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery

CWGC war cemetery in Turkey
40°19′16″N 26°16′16″E / 40.321074°N 26.271021°E / 40.321074; 26.271021
near 
Gallipoli, Turkey
Total burials1,074
Unknowns
684Burials by nation
Allied Powers:
  • Australian: 25
  • British: 562
  • Newfoundland: 12
Burials by war
World War I: 1,074
Statistics source: Battlefields 1914–1918

Azmak Cemetery near Suvla Bay, Gallipoli, Turkey was constructed shortly after the end of the First World War by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and filled with graves brought in from small cemeteries and sites around it. It is on the south side of Azmak Dere, from which it takes its name, a small ravine which runs into the salt lake at Suvla Bay. Special memorials record the names of 53 British and 3 Newfoundland soldiers buried in the cemetery but whose graves are not positively identified.

Notable graves

Amongst the graves are 115 men of the 1/5th (Territorial) Battalion of the Norfolk Regiment, of which the names of only two are known. The battalion, which included a company recruited from workers from the Sandringham House Royal estate, suffered heavy losses on 12 August 1915 and a myth grew up that the unit had advanced into a mist and simply disappeared.[1] However the remains of many of them were found after the Armistice and interred in the cemetery. In 1999 a TV film, All the King's Men was made about the incident.

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Historic UK". The vanished battalion of the King's Own Sandringhams. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Azmak Cemetery.
  • Azmak Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery at Find a Grave Edit this at Wikidata