Basra Memorial
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Basra_Memorial an entity of type: Thing
The Basra Memorial is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission war memorial near Zubayr, Iraq. The memorial commemorates 40,682 Commonwealth forces (99% Indians) members who died during the Mesopotamian Campaign, from the Autumn of 1914 to the end of August 1921, and whose graves are not known. The memorial was designed by Edward Prioleau Warren. It was unveiled by Gilbert Clayton on 27 March 1929. Originally located eight kilometres north of Basra, near the Shatt al-Arab River, it was moved southwest in 1997 to a battleground from the much more recent Gulf War.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Basra Memorial
rdf:langString
Basra Memorial
xsd:float
30.4116382598877
xsd:float
47.54583358764648
xsd:integer
42420659
xsd:integer
1070045997
xsd:date
1929-03-27
xsd:integer
40682
rdf:langString
First World War missing, presumed dead from the Mesopotamia campaign and have no known grave.
xsd:integer
38
xsd:string
30.411638888888888 47.545833333333334
rdf:langString
The Basra Memorial is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission war memorial near Zubayr, Iraq. The memorial commemorates 40,682 Commonwealth forces (99% Indians) members who died during the Mesopotamian Campaign, from the Autumn of 1914 to the end of August 1921, and whose graves are not known. The memorial was designed by Edward Prioleau Warren. It was unveiled by Gilbert Clayton on 27 March 1929. Originally located eight kilometres north of Basra, near the Shatt al-Arab River, it was moved southwest in 1997 to a battleground from the much more recent Gulf War. The Telegraph reported on 10 November 2013 that the memorial had suffered deliberate sabotage, with some of the its items missing which include the Cross of Remembrance and the bronze plaques from the Wall of Remembrance, carrying the names of the fallen. The BBC reported that Colin Kerr, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission publicity director, said that a total of 30,000 Indian soldiers are not named on the Basra memorial, despite fallen British soldiers being named, only Indian officers are accorded with the honour. The deaths of the non-commissioned men are commemorated by regiment but simply as "and 258 other Indian soldiers" or "and 272 other Indian soldiers." Kerr added that the commission knows their identities and has launched a project to find ways to publicise them both in India and in Britain.
rdf:langString
AND TO THE HONOURED MEMORY
rdf:langString
AND WHOSE GRAVES
rdf:langString
ARE NOT KNOWN
rdf:langString
IN THE YEARS 1914–1921
rdf:langString
OF THE ARMIES OF
rdf:langString
OF THESE OFFICERS AND MEN
rdf:langString
THE BRITISH EMPIRE
rdf:langString
TO THE GLORY OF GOD
rdf:langString
WHO FELL IN THE IRAQ CAMPAIGN
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
3480
<Geometry>
POINT(47.545833587646 30.411638259888)