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The unknown soldier1/24/2024 On 8 November 1920, the deputies unanimously voted in a law, equally approved unanimously by the Senate, which awarded the honours of the Pantheon “to the remains of one 1914-1918 war”. The author Binet-Valmer led a virulent campaign to entomb this Unknown Soldier under the Arc de Triomphe. Meanwhile, associations of former combatants challenged the choice of the site, preferring to affirm the exceptional character of his death, symbol of the hundreds of thousands of others killed in action. On 12 November 1919, the Chamber of Deputies decided that the anonymous remains of the French soldier killed in combat would be transferred to the Pantheon. The Unknown Soldier At The Arc de Triompheīeginning in 1916, an idea developed to open the doors of the Pantheon so that people could view “one of the unknown soldiers who died valiantly for his country” and on whose tomb would be inscribed just two words, “A Soldier”, and the date, “1914-191?”.Įspoused in 1918 and supported by a fervent press campaign, the proposition was ultimately accepted.
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