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Ypres

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Ypres

a town in W Belgium, in W Flanders province near the border with France: scene of many sieges and battles, esp in World War I, when it was completely destroyed. Pop.: 35 021 (2004 est.)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Ypres

 

(Flemish, leper), a city in northwestern Belgium, in the province of West Flanders. Population, 18,500 (1967). It is the site of textile and food industries. Machines used in the production of textiles are also manufactured. The city was first mentioned in chronicles in 1109. Between the 12th and 14th centuries, Ypres competed with Bruges and Ghent as the center of the production of cloth by guilds. Later the city went into a decline. Architectural landmarks in Ypres include the Cathedral of St. Martin (13th-15th centuries) and Cloth Hall (1200–1304), a masterpiece of secular Gothic architecture. Other monuments of medieval Lowlands architecture have also been preserved.

During World War I (1914–18) in the vicinity of Ypres, the German Fourth Army launched a counterattack against the Ypres salient (April 1915) and forestalled an offensive being prepared by the Anglo-French forces. The Germans occupied most of the salient. On April 22, the first day of fighting, the Germans used a weapon of chemical warfare (chlorine gas) and inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy. This was the first use of chemical warfare in the history of war. In 1917, from July 7 to November 6, the English Fifth and Second armies and the French First Army repeatedly launched offensives. Achieving minor successes, they suffered enormous losses. On July 12, 1917, the Germans used mustard gas, which is also known as yperite, for the first time.

REFERENCE

Deyne, V. de. Ypres …. Liège, 1925.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Exactly 100 years ago, during the third Battle of Ypres, an attack by British and French troops faltered because a concealed blockhouse was being defended by a machine gun post of the German army.
In this first re-examination of the first Battle of Ypres since 1967, Prof.
Tours range from a four-day break covering the third battle of Ypres for pounds 299 per person, to a four day paratroopers break in "Normandy, June 1944", for pounds 339 per person.
A survivor, Sapper Thomas Winter, wrote to his sister Mary of the horror during the Battle of Ypres in 1915.
John, who has written other books on war, documents the stories of Welsh troops involved in the final period of World War I, including the Third Battle of Ypres and the storming of the Pilckem Ridge by the 38th (Welsh) Division and the Guards Division, the Welsh troops who fought in the final offensives at Passchendaele Ridge, the Battle of Cambrai, the final offensives in Palestine, the German offensive, and the Hundred Days Offensive.
If Ypres was sometimes referred to by the British Tommies as 'Wipers', the Battle of Passchendaele was, in fact, the third battle of Ypres.
The Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele) was one of the most horrific episodes of the First World War, remembered as a remorseless slog through the mud and rain, and was fought in Belgium from July 31 to November 10, 1917, lasting a total of 103 days.
The Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele) was one of the most horrific episodes of the First World War, remembered as a remorseless fight through mud and rain, and was fought in Belgium from July 31 to November 10, 1917, lasting a total of 103 days.
FACTUAL A century ago, the third battle of Ypres was fought from 31 July to November 6 in northern Belgium.
Mrs May will break off from her three-week summer holiday to join the Prince of Wales and Duke and Duchess of Cambridge in paying their respects to those who fell in the Third Battle of Ypres, which began on July 31 1917 and lasted until November that year.
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