Neha Patil (Editor)

Powązki Military Cemetery

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Established
  
1912

Country
  
Poland

Size
  
24 ha

Phone
  
+48 22 633 21 40

Location
  
Warsaw

Type
  
Public

Website
  
Official website

Powązki Military Cemetery

Address
  
Powązkowska 43/45, 01-797 Warszawa, Poland

Burials
  
Wojciech Jaruzelski, Witold Pilecki, Bolesław Bierut

Similar
  
Powązki Cemetery, Bródno Cemetery, Field Cathedral of the Poli, Warsaw Uprising Museum, Tomb of the Unknown

Pow zki wojskowe


Powązki Military Cemetery ([pɔˈvɔ̃skʲi]; Polish: Cmentarz Wojskowy na Powązkach) is an old military cemetery located in the Żoliborz district, western part of Warsaw, Poland. The cemetery is often confused with the older Powązki Cemetery, known colloquially as "Old Powązki". The Old Powązki cemetery is located to the south-east of the military cemetery.

The military cemetery holds the graves of many who have fought and died for their country since the early 19th century, including a large number involved in the 1920 Battle of Warsaw, the September 1939 Campaign, and the ill-fated 1944 Warsaw Uprising against Nazi Germany.

It was founded in 1912 as an annex to the Catholic cemetery, but after Poland regained independence in 1918, it became the state cemetery, where some of the most notable people of the period were buried, regardless of their faith.

A large part of the cemetery is occupied by graves of Polish soldiers who died in the Warsaw Uprising. Most of the graves were exhumed between 1945 and 1953 from the streets of Warsaw. In many cases, the names of the soldiers remain unknown, and the graves are marked only by the Polish Red Cross identification number. Until the early 1950s, brothers-in-arms of many dead soldiers organised exhumations of their colleagues on their own, and there are many quarters where soldiers of specific units are buried. Also in the cemetery are several mass graves of (mostly unknown) civilian victims of the German terror during World War II, especially during the Warsaw Uprising. There are mass graves of political prisoners executed during the Stalinist period, which lie under the graves of Communist figures. It took a change in the law to enable researchers to begin the recovery of these remains. As of August 2015, that work was ongoing.

In 1964 communist authorities renamed the cemetery to "Communal Cemetery". The traditional name was restored in 1998.

References

Powązki Military Cemetery Wikipedia