Books of Remembrance (Canada)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Books_of_Remembrance_(Canada) an entity of type: WikicatCanadianMilitaryMemorialsAndCemeteries
The eight Books of Remembrance (French: Livres du Souvenir) housed in the Memorial Chamber in the Peace Tower of the Canadian Parliament Buildings in Ottawa are illuminated manuscript volumes recording the names of members of the Canadian Forces and Canadian Merchant Navy killed on active service in wartime, and in other conflicts. There are eight separate books, beginning with the first to be commissioned listing the names of the dead from the First World War.
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Books of Remembrance (Canada)
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Books of Remembrance
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7476706
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1124623948
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1927-08-03
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members of the Canadian Forces and Canadian Merchant Navy killed on active service in wartime, and in other conflicts
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William Lyon Mackenzie King examines the first Book of Remembrance in 1942.
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James Purves 1929–1940; Alan Beddoe 1940–1975; ...
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The eight Books of Remembrance (French: Livres du Souvenir) housed in the Memorial Chamber in the Peace Tower of the Canadian Parliament Buildings in Ottawa are illuminated manuscript volumes recording the names of members of the Canadian Forces and Canadian Merchant Navy killed on active service in wartime, and in other conflicts. There are eight separate books, beginning with the first to be commissioned listing the names of the dead from the First World War. The display case for the first book was designed by John A. Pearson, architect of the Peace Tower, and made by Bromsgrove Guild Limited (Great Britain) and Robert Mitchell Company in 1928. Made of bronze, enamel and other metals, it is decorated with four kneeling angels and a ribbon encircling a laurel. It rests on an altar of English Hoptonwood limestone that was a British gift to Canada, situated at the centre of the chamber. Later books are displayed on altars of Hoptonwood stone and bronze, decorated with poppies, located against the walls of the chamber. The pages of each of the Books are turned every day of the year at 11 a.m. by a constable of the Parliamentary Protective Service, so that every name is on display to visitors at least once during each calendar year.
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Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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10229