Ysselsteyn

Ysselsteyn German war cemetery
German War Graves Commission
Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge.

Cemetry Ysselsteyn
Used for those deceased 1939–1945
Established 1947
Location near Venray, Netherlands
Total burials 31,598
Burials by nation
Germany and German Hiwis (many Hiwis from Georgia)
Burials by war
World War I (85); World War II (31,500)
There is also a municipality called IJsselstein (same pronunciation), in the province of Utrecht, the Netherlands.

Ysselsteyn is a small village in the municipality of Venray in Limburg, Netherlands. It was established in 1921 and named after its designer, Hendrik Albert van IJsselsteyn, then Minister of Agriculture.[1]

Ysselsteyn's main object of interest is the nearby German war cemetery (26 hectare or 70 acres), which contains 31,598 graves of German soldiers who died in the Netherlands during World War II. In addition, there are 85 graves of German soldiers who fell in World War I and whose bodies ended up in the Netherlands by floating down rivers, mainly the Meuse. (The Netherlands were neutral in World War I.)

Ysselsteyn German war cemetery is now the only German war cemetery in the Netherlands as after World War II all German fatalities were concentrated there. It is administered by the German War Graves Commission, the Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge.

Contents

Ysselsteyn Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ ter Laan, K. et al. ed. (1942) (in Dutch). Van Goor's aardrijkskundig woordenboek van Nederland. Den Haag: Van Goor Zonen. 

External links