Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
A world war memorial made of stone, stands proudly in the park of Smiths Falls, Ontario.
Windsor, Canada - June 12, 2024: The Essex County War Memorial Cenotaph in a public park in the downtown district.
Aubusson, France-04 12 2024: Statue of a soldier at the war memorial by sculptor Lardillier  created around 1920 and located on the Place de La Liberation in the small town of Aubusson, Central France.
Hartmannswillerkopf, ook wel bekend onder de naam Vieil Armand, is een berg in de Vogezen in het zuiden van de Elzas. De piek van de berg ligt op 956 meter boven de zeespiegel en naar het oosten heeft de bezoeker een vrij uitzicht over de vallei van de Rijn. Bij Hartmannswillerkopf werd tijdens de Eerste Wereldoorlog zwaar gevochten. De strijd tussen het Duitse en Franse leger leidde tot een loopgravenoorlog. Restanten van deze loopgraven en versterkingen zijn op deze locatie nog aanwezig.
Field of Crosses in remembrance of fallen Canadian Soldiers
War monument with Canadian flag waving against graduated blue sky.
stone grave slabs. engraved number 1914 commemorating the beginning of the war when a son died in Serbia or Russia. a lichen-covered German grave as a background for a war game,
Halifax, Canada - August, 2023: Naval Memorial, located in Point Pleasant Park, which commemorates the fallen, serving the Canadian navy in World War I and World War II.
National War Memorial
Detail in Orta San Giulio, Italy
A wreath of poppies to commemorate the fallen in World War Two
John Hancock memorial in Granary Burying Ground.
Canadian war monument in Langemark - Belgium
Architecture in the heart of Paris
Cottenham, England, UK - December 30, 2013: Statue in the village of Cottenham, Cambridgeshire, England, UK, dedicated to the memory of the men of Cottenham who died in World War I and World War II.  Portland Stone memorial consisting of a large pediment and pedestal with sunken panels on each side which are engraved with dedicatory inscriptions in memory of the men of Cottenham who dies in World War I and World War II. On the pedestal stands a carved Soldier in field service order with helmet, gas mask & pack. He stands in mourning with his head bowed and rifle reversed. The memorial was dedicated on 4th September 1921 and was designed and constructed by architect and contractor Fred Baccus of Histon
The minuteman statue stands proud over Lexington battlefield green, September 2022. The bronze statue memorializes the men who fought here at the start of the American revolution April 19 1775.
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Arlington National Cemetery. Virginia.
The word 'War' highlighted in text inscribed on stone memorial.
There is no copyright, nor right to the image. The sculptor died in 1943. It is Mr. Charles-Henri Pourquet. He was awarded a gold medal in 1929, out of competition, and the legion of honor in 1931.  This statue of a soldier is called \
Huntingdon Town centre Cenotaph in the mist. This is a close-up showing the frozen spiders webs on the statue on a cold winter's day,  Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
Convent of San Marcos at Leon City, Spain. Memorial medallion of Key towns of St. James pilgrimage, Roncesvalles
Ottawa, Canada, May 22,2011- Close up of Canada\\'s National War Memorial in Ottawa. The memorial depicts all branches of Canada\\'s armed service during the First World War.
The poppy is the enduring symbol of remembrance of the First World War. It is strongly linked with Armistice Day (11 November), but the poppy's origin as a popular symbol of remembrance lies in the landscapes of the First World War.\n\nPoppies were a common sight, especially on the Western Front. They flourished in the soil churned up by the fighting and shelling. The flower provided Canadian doctor John McCrae with inspiration for his poem 'In Flanders Fields', which he wrote whilst serving in Ypres in 1915.\n\nArtificial poppies were first sold in Britain in 1921 to raise money for the Earl Haig Fund in support of ex-servicemen and the families of those who had died in the conflict. They were supplied by Anna Guérin, who had been manufacturing the flowers in France to raise money for war orphans. Selling poppies proved so popular that in 1922 the British Legion founded a factory - staffed by disabled ex-servicemen - to produce its own. It continues to do so today.
Lexington battlefield memorial plaque in granite. Engraved granite with selective focus showing Lexington and the April 19 1775 date, a sacred place of the start of the American revolution.
The World War II Memorial in Washington DC, USA
Detail of the engraving in granite at a US War Memorial
Status of a soldier in Bundaberg, Queensland, Australia
Stone in graveyard with words \
Portland, ME, USA, 9.4.23 - A PFD statue that says \
Military cemetery in Vukovar, Croatia.
Free Images: "bestof:Lest We Forget detail - World War I Memorial - Marlborough, MA - DSC04387.JPG A figure of a World War I soldier with his head bowed and a cross used to mark"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day