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  • A man drives his tricycle through the narrow alleys of the medieval village of Mesta, Chios, Greece
    090923_012.jpg
  • An Afghan man rests on fishing nets in Molyvos port hours after his boat has been rescued by the Greek Coast Guard. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_096.jpg
  • Man fishing in the small Prespa near the village of Tren, Albania
    PL20.jpg
  • The owner of the coffee house of Pyrgi, Chios, chatting on the phone. Behind him an old advert for local Chios made fizzy drinks.
    090923_340.jpg
  • Farhan Khadeda Khalaf a 24 year old Yazidi from Siba Sheikh Khidir, northern Iraq.<br />
<br />
This is a series of portraits of Yazidi refugees who were stranded since April 2016 in Greece.  All of them survived the Yazidi Genocide by ISIS in August 2014 and most of them have lost family members.
    36_160828_539.jpg
  • A couple of days later my sister called me and said that ISIS gathered all the Yazidis, around 1700 people and took all their valuables. Then they separated men from women and children. Then they brought trucks and start taking away the men, group by group, 20 - 25 men at the time. <br />
<br />
After a while they start hearing gunshots from outside the village. ISIS took some boys too, but they didn’t kill the ones who didn’t have hair on their legs, and they brought them back to their mothers. Those kids witness the execution of the men and told the women what happened.  <br />
<br />
The women asked ISIS if that’s true, ISIS said no, we didn’t kill anyone we just took the men to another place. When they asked what were those gunshots they heard  ISIS said that was nothing, there were some bad dogs outside the village and we shot at the air to scare them.
    22_160828_506.jpg
  • One of the owners of the traditional Tsamparlis Distillery in Chios town. The distillery was founded in 1914 and it still run by the same family. It produces Ouzo, Mastic Liqueur and Tangerine Liqueur
    090924_351.jpg
  • My sister and her children was captured by ISIS and taken by one of them to a Syrian town. She was abused for weeks but one day she managed to escaped from the back window of the house. She was lucky, because she found some Muslim clothes in the house and nobody could recognise her or her daughters.<br />
<br />
She was going around the village and asking people for help but nobody took her in their house. Everyone in the village was Muslim but not everyone was with ISIS. They were good people also. It was winter and raining. She knocked on many people’s doors but no one opened her and nobody helped her, nobody accept her.
    40_160907_292.jpg
  • Elias Khadeda Ishmail a 54 year old Yazidi from Siba Sheikh Khidir, northern Iraq.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
This is a series of portraits of Yazidi refugees who were stranded since April 2016 in Greece.  All of them survived the Yazidi Genocide by ISIS in August 2014 and most of them have lost family members.
    23_160828_514.jpg
  • Qawal Kheder Saydo a 30 year old Yazidi from Rambusi, northern Iraq. <br />
<br />
This is a series of portraits of Yazidi refugees who were stranded since April 2016 in Greece.  All of them survived the Yazidi Genocide by ISIS in August 2014 and most of them have lost family members.
    13_160907_228.jpg
  • Hazim Elias Khadeda a 22 year old Yazidi from Siba Sheikh Khidir, northern Iraq.<br />
<br />
This is a series of portraits of Yazidi refugees who were stranded since April 2016 in Greece.  All of them survived the Yazidi Genocide by ISIS in August 2014 and most of them have lost family members.
    08_160828_499.jpg
  • My house was there. Now it’s an ISIS prison. <br />
<br />
Only Yazidis were living in my village except one house with Muslims.<br />
<br />
This Muslim family came to our village 30 years ago, they had some problems in their village so they  moved to ours for shelter and we accepted them. <br />
<br />
When ISIS came to our area this same Muslim family bombed a lorry full of Yazidis on the 14th of August 2014.
    06_160828_519.jpg
  • One of the narrow alleys in Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_222.jpg
  • Zhare on his tractor near Konjsko, FYR Macedonia
    PL11.jpg
  • A wondering greengrocer selling vegetables and fruits from the back of his pick up track parked in a street in Pyrgi, Chios. In the background a typical local house with the decorative motives in the facade- Xysta or sgraffito.<br />
<br />
Pyrgi in Chios is known as the "painted village" on account of the decoration of the houses. The village still keeps its medieval style and together with the other Mastichochoria (Mastic Villages) are in the list of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity of UNESCO
    090924_529.jpg
  • One of the narrow alleys in Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_251.jpg
  • One of the narrow alleys in Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_194.jpg
  • There villagers drink their morning coffee under the arches of the narrow alleys of Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_099.jpg
  • A local woman walks under an arch in in Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_091.jpg
  • A street greengrocer in one of the alleys of the medieval village of Mesta, Chios, Greece.
    090922_129.jpg
  • Abdulbaki Yunis, a Syrian Kurd refugee from Damascus in the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    21_160826_044.jpg
  • Abdulbaki Yunis, a Syrian Kurd refugee from Damascus in the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    36_160826_044.jpg
  • A disabled Syrian in his 70's resting in his walking stick after he disembark from a boat that brought him to Europe. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece. Many spend their life savings, over $1000, to buy a space on those boats.
    150517_351.jpg
  • Maki Mihail (66) in his field near Kallamas, Albania
    PL43.jpg
  • Rodina and Stefan Burmo (70) in the village of Tuminec, Albania
    PL38.jpg
  • Jovan Malevski (71) in his field near the village of Glloboçeni, Albania
    PL31.jpg
  • Themistocles (65) resting in his field near the village of Lemos, Greece
    PL28.jpg
  • Vasko Ivanovski (50) near Stanje, FYR Macedonia
    PL23.jpg
  • Ilia Themelko (40) working in a field near the village of Lemos, Greece
    PL13.jpg
  • Greek musician Yiannis Bach Spyropoulos for  Epsilon magazine
    28_080424_083.jpg
  • A pedestrian with an umbrella under rain passing by a plaque portraying an old drachma coin, which was replaced by the euro in 2002, outside Athens City Hall
    GMK120518_095.jpg
  • One of the narrow alleys in Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_220.jpg
  • There villagers drink their morning coffee under the arches of the narrow alleys of Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_098.jpg
  • One of the narrow alleys in Mesta village in Chios island, Greece.
    090923_056.jpg
  • An Afghan carrying his child is walking the the 9 hour distance from Skala Sykaminias to the village of Moria where the First Reception Centre is located. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_231.jpg
  • Kico Kitan (70) in his field near the village of Tuminec, Albania
    PL07.jpg
  • two chemists tasting olive oil at the olive oil testing room
    01GMK_090305_011.jpg
  • Man with eggs / Carpet
    03_120330_113_097_B.jpg
  • portrait of a man <br />
september 1976
    MS76_001.jpg
  • Man photographing with his mobile phone a plaque portraying an old drachma coin, which was replaced by the euro in 2002, outside Athens City Hall
    GMK120518_130.jpg
  • Cinema complex build in the early 1980's for the high-ranking party members in the resort of Examilia. After the collapse of communism, the place was looted. The man was the projectionist.
    BH_147.jpg
  • A man passing by a smashed shop front on Ermou Street. <br />
<br />
Following the murder of a 15 year old boy, Alexandros Grigoropoulos, by a policeman on 6 December 2008 widespread riots, protests and unrest followed lasting for several weeks and spreading beyond the capital and even overseas<br />
<br />
When I walked in the streets of my town the day after the riots I instantly forgot the image I had about Athens, that of a bustling, peaceful, energetic metropolis and in my mind came the old photographs from WWII, the civil war and the students uprising against the dictatorship. <br />
<br />
Thus I decided not to turn my digital camera straight to the destroyed buildings but to photograph through an old camera that worked as a filter, a barrier between me and the city.
    081209_438.jpg
  • When we arrived in Lesbos in Greece we thought that we will be safe, but they put us in a camp together with many Muslim man. Some of them looked like ISIS with long beards, some were Afghan, some Pakistani and there were some Arabs too. We were scared and we said to the police that they should put us in a separate place. <br />
<br />
In Leros the Afghans and Pakistanis attacked us few times, and sometimes after their Friday prayers they were making gestures like they wanted to behead us.
    53_160828_345.jpg
  • Syrian refugee children gather around a man repairing a fishing rod in the gounds of PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    62_160602_089.jpg
  • A man holding an umbrella tries to dry by an open fire at the transit camp of Idomeni, Greece. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling.
    160310_172.jpg
  • A man walks under the rain in a flooded muddy field near the transit camp of Idomeni, Greece. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling.
    160310_004.jpg
  • An Afghan man showing a piece of paper with his waiting list number in Moria camp.
    150719_106.jpg
  • A group of Syrian refugees, among them a disabled man carried by his compatriots and locals,  the moment they disembark from their small inflatable boat and land to Europe, on the beach of Skala Sykaminias. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece. Many spend their life savings, over $1000, to buy a space on those boats.
    150517_337.jpg
  • An Afghan man holding a baby in the port of Molyvos, Lesbos island, hours after his boat has been rescued by the Greek Coast Guard. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_059.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform standing in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial.  The memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_522.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform standing in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial.  The memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_520.jpg
  • The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_013.jpg
  • The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_010.jpg
  • Poppy wreaths laid near the Lochnagar Crater. <br />
The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_007.jpg
  • The Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_090.jpg
  • The Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_081.jpg
  • Inside the Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_077.jpg
  • Inside the Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_067.jpg
  • Endless crosses at the cemetery outside the Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_056.jpg
  • Endless crosses at the cemetery outside the Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_057.jpg
  • The Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_041.jpg
  • Endless crosses at the cemetery outside the Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_119.jpg
  • Endless crosses at the cemetery outside the Douaumont ossuary (L'ossuaire de Douaumont) built in 1932 is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died at the battle of Verdun (21 February 1916 – 19 December 1916) During the battle 230.000 man died.  Ossuaire de Verdun, Verdun, ‪Meuse‬, France
    101108_094.jpg
  • A man talking to a riot policeman in front of the Greek parliament. <br />
<br />
Following the murder of a 15 year old boy, Alexandros Grigoropoulos, by a policeman on 6 December 2008 widespread riots, protests and unrest followed lasting for several weeks and spreading beyond the capital and even overseas<br />
<br />
When I walked in the streets of my town the day after the riots I instantly forgot the image I had about Athens, that of a bustling, peaceful, energetic metropolis and in my mind came the old photographs from WWII, the civil war and the students uprising against the dictatorship. <br />
<br />
Thus I decided not to turn my digital camera straight to the destroyed buildings but to photograph through an old camera that worked as a filter, a barrier between me and the city.
    081213_024.jpg
  • A man covering his nose and mouth walks on Ermou street while burned out shops still smoke. <br />
<br />
Following the murder of a 15 year old boy, Alexandros Grigoropoulos, by a policeman on 6 December 2008 widespread riots, protests and unrest followed lasting for several weeks and spreading beyond the capital and even overseas<br />
<br />
When I walked in the streets of my town the day after the riots I instantly forgot the image I had about Athens, that of a bustling, peaceful, energetic metropolis and in my mind came the old photographs from WWII, the civil war and the students uprising against the dictatorship. <br />
<br />
Thus I decided not to turn my digital camera straight to the destroyed buildings but to photograph through an old camera that worked as a filter, a barrier between me and the city.
    081209_661.jpg
  • Syrian refugee children gather around a man repairing a fishing rod in the gounds of PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    35_160602_089.jpg
  • A man from Pakistan is sitting at the railway tracks in Idomeni train station. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling.
    160318_090.jpg
  • A man sleeps in a field near Idomeni,Greece. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling.
    160318_075.jpg
  • This man was standing at this barrier looking at the Greek - FYR Macedonian border for more than half an hour. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling.
    160316_066.jpg
  • A man walks with all the possessions wrapped in UNHCR blanket in a flooded muddy field near the transit camp of Idomeni, Greece. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling.
    160310_104.jpg
  • A man stands in muddy field at the transit camp of Idomeni, Greece. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling.
    160310_388.jpg
  • A young man from Iraq waking up in his tent in the railway station of Idomeni. Many people decided to live away from the transit camp where the conditions are appalling. <br />
<br />
Thousands of refugees are stranded in Idomeni unable to cross the border. The facilities here are stretched to the limit and the conditions are appalling. It's raining, it's cold there is mud everywhere and there is no hope that the border will open anytime soon.
    160312_071.jpg
  • Noon, Monday 14th of September 2015. The bus from Belgrade to Kanjiža is full of refugees and migrants heading to border. One of them is a man from Daraa with a broken leg. Few hours later I see him walking with crutches on the disused rail line, it must have taken him few hours.
    150914_162.jpg
  • Sunday 13th of September 2015. A Kurdish man is washing his face minutes after he alight from the Gevgelija to Slanishte train in the Republic of Macedonia.
    150913_398.jpg
  • Noon, Sunday 13th of September 2015. Sham and Bisan sleep on Aysha’s lap. They are on a special train just for refugees and immigrants from Gevgelija to Slanishte , across the Republic of North Macedonia. The train was packed,when Aysha got in. All the seats of the car were taken by young men from Iraq and Afghanistan. Aysha was displeased but she didn’t protest. Somebody from the train said to a man to give his seat for Aysha, he did so reluctantly. There was no toilet on the train and no one had any idea were it goes or how long the journey will be.
    150913_300.jpg
  • MSF nurse Daphne Garefou gives a treatment to a man with blisters at the medical centre in Kara Tepe camp.
    150910_044.jpg
  • MSF nurse Daphne Garefou gives a treatment to a man with blisters at the medical centre in Kara Tepe camp.
    150910_038.jpg
  • An Afghan man sleeping rough in the port of Mytiline between parked lorries.
    150909_433.jpg
  • MSF translators Bashir and Rashid try to wake up a  Syrian refugee who was sleeping by the road. The man later told us that he was so tired from walking that he couldn't look for a better shelter. Refugees land at the northern shores of the island of Lesbos and then they have to walk the 9 hour distance to one of the camps.
    150720_077.jpg
  • A man running through mountains of rubbish lying next to refugees tents in Moria camp.
    150719_051.jpg
  • An Afghan man rests on the seawall of Molyvos port hours after his boat has been rescued by the Greek Coast Guard. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_118.jpg
  • An Afghan man showing me the breakfast he received from a local volunteers' soup kitchen, hours after his boat has been rescued by the Greek Coast Guard. The people of Lesbos island, many of whom come from families that were refugees themselves, provide meals and cloths for the refugees everyday. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_033.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform poses for a photograph with a tourist  in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial. On the back are the three bronze tablets that carry the names of 820 members of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, the Newfoundland Royal Naval Reserve, and the Mercantile Marines who died in the First World War and have no known grave. The Caribou Memorial, the emblem of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, standing atop a mound of Newfoundland granite. Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_534.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform standing in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial. On the back are the three bronze tablets that carry the names of 820 members of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, the Newfoundland Royal Naval Reserve, and the Mercantile Marines who died in the First World War and have no known grave. The Caribou Memorial, the emblem of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, standing atop a mound of Newfoundland granite. Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_529.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform standing in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial. On the back are the three bronze tablets that carry the names of 820 members of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, the Newfoundland Royal Naval Reserve, and the Mercantile Marines who died in the First World War and have no known grave. The Caribou Memorial, the emblem of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment, standing atop a mound of Newfoundland granite. Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_527.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform standing in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial.  The memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_526.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform standing in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial.  The memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_525.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform standing in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial.  The memorial is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_516.jpg
  • A man dressed with a ‪Canadian Expeditionary Force‬  officers uniform poses in front of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial that is dedicated to the commemoration of the Newfoundland Regiment that fought in the battle of Somme and WWI in general. Most of the  Newfoundland Regiment were dead within 15 to 20 minutes of leaving their trench in the morning of the 1st July 1916 during the first day of the Battle of the Somme.
    101109_513.jpg
  • A school visit at the Lochnagar Crater, the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_067.jpg
  • The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_046.jpg
  • A school visit at the Lochnagar Crater, the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_065.jpg
  • A school visit at the Lochnagar Crater, the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_034.jpg
  • A school visit at the  Lochnagar Crater, the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_032.jpg
  • The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_022.jpg
  • A memorial banch in the Lochnagar Crater, the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_014.jpg
  • Poppy wreaths laid near the Lochnagar Crater. <br />
The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_008.jpg
  • The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_006.jpg
  • The entrance to the Lochnagar Crater.<br />
The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_001.jpg
  • The Lochnagar Crater is the largest manmade crater created in WWI. The mine was laid by the 179th Tunneling Company Royal Engineers and it was exploded two minutes before 7:30 (the zero hour for the british offensive) on the morning of July 1st 1916.  At the time this was the largest man made explosion ever made and there are reports that it was heard in London. In 1978 the area was purchased by Richard Dunning who decided to reserve the place and make a memorial.
    101109_005.jpg
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