World War One remains in West Flanders : chimney of former Ramskapelle village brickworks converted in strategic military post, south of Nieuwpoort beach resort
(Browse the collection : West Flanders Province time lapse and video stock footage)
The Belgian army’s defense of the Yser Canal in October 1914 is referred to as the Battle of Yser. The land surrounding the River Yser, which formed a natural obstacle to the German advance, was woven through with a network of drainage canals, the area itself being made up of ‘polder’, or reclaimed land.
(War Race)
Battles took place as the armies sidestepped one another towards the French-Belgian coast and the Channel ports of Calais, Dunkirk, Ostend and Zeebrugge. This period of fighting has become known as “The Race to the Sea”.
The Battle of the Yser — to give the river its then French name — was opened on 16th October 1914 with heavy attacks on both Nieuwpoort and Diksmuide. Behind the Belgians’ advanced line lay the IJzer River forming a natural barrier between Nieuwpoort and Diksmuide. This entire area is polders — low-lying land reclaimed from the sea and criss-crossed by a network of drainage ditches and waterways. Behind that was the main railway line between Nieuwpoort and Diksmuide which was hardly two metres above ground.
File names, codec and sizes | ||
ramska02_fhd | ramska02_uhd | ramska02_web |
Mov ProRes 422 HQ | Mov ProRes 422 HQ | H264 Mp4 |
158 Mo | 596 Mo | 9,27 Mo |