Harman Patil (Editor)

Museum of the Great War

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Phone
  
+33 3 22 83 14 18

Address
  
Place André Audinot, 80200 Péronne, France

Hours
  
Closed today WednesdayClosedThursday9:30AM–5PMFriday9:30AM–5PMSaturday9:30AM–5PMSunday9:30AM–5PMMonday9:30AM–5PMTuesday9:30AM–5PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Musée Somme 1916, Thiepval Memorial, Musée de la Grande Guerre d, Beaumont‑Hamel Newfoundland Memorial, Ulster Tower

The Museum of the Great War (French: Historial de la Grande Guerre) located near the heart of the World War I Somme battlefields, is housed within the Château de Péronne, a castle in the town of Péronne, France. The museum looks mostly at the Great War, and the years just before and just after. It strives to place war in a social context, stressing "the common suffering of the combatants" and "the civilians, who were equally mobilised by the war effort".

Additionally, it has two major permanent specialist exhibits:

According to museum research, 500,000 French, 160,000 British and (at June 1916) 85,000 Germans were prisoners of war. By including displaced and detained civilians, this figure rises to 6.6 million. The exhibition deals with all aspects of captivity: the food, for example, was insufficient and of poor quality; illness was rife; and prisoners of war were required to work hard.

For some, World War I was seen as a means of defending civilisation against barbarism, to protect the future of children. The image of the child was thus frequently used in posters, notably for recruitment. Children, too, were the subject of propaganda. School books of the period often dwelt on patriotic duty for future soldiers and future nurses. Simplified versions of soldiers, sailors and nurses became popular for children and toys took on a military air.

There is another museum with a similar name, near Paris, called the Musée de la Grande Guerre du Pays de Meaux

References

Museum of the Great War Wikipedia