마지막 업데이트: 2월 19, 2026
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5월 2, 2025, The Bluff Memorial and Crater
some very beautiful works on the route
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5월 1, 2025, Mont Noir (Ouest)
Very nice walk with a beautiful view at the finish
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1월 20, 2025, Hellegat Forest
On this path on the edge of the Bos van Hellegat you dive into a beautiful green vegetation tunnel.
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10월 7, 2024, Cloth Hall (Lakenhalle) Ypres
The Cloth Hall in Ypres is one of the largest Gothic-style civil buildings in Europe. Built between 1230 and 1304, it served as a covered market place for cloth, an important trade product in the Middle Ages. The 70-metre high belfry, which was built from 1250 onwards, emphasises the power and wealth of the city of Ypres at that time. During the First World War, the Cloth Hall was completely destroyed, but it was later meticulously rebuilt and completed in 1967. Today it houses the In Flanders Fields Museum and the Ypres Museum.
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7월 28, 2024, Cloth Hall (Lakenhalle) Ypres
The Cloth Hall (Flemish: Lakenhalle van Ieper) is a large, Gothic building complex located in the center of the Flemish city of Ypres. The complex originally dates back to the 13th century. The foundation stone is said to have been laid around 1200 by the Count of Flanders, and its construction lasted until 1304. The hall served as a transshipment and storage area for textiles (cloth hall). Part of the ensemble is a 70-meter-high belfry with a carillon that plays every half hour. On November 4, 1914, the German general Berthold von Deimling had the famous medieval Cloth Hall reduced to rubble and ashes without any military reason and against the express orders of his commander-in-chief, Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria. The Cloth Hall was reconstructed as faithfully as possible to the original from the 1920s to 1967. It is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The building is made largely of sandstone from the Arras region. The upper floor and corner turrets of the belfry, as well as the corner turrets of the hall, are mainly built of the yellow brick typical of West Flanders. In contrast to many buildings of the Brick Gothic style in Flanders, the brick here is drowned out by the lavish stone decoration.
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7월 13, 2024, Cloth Hall (Lakenhalle) Ypres
Nice square with many restaurants and cafes.
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5월 16, 2024, Cloth Hall (Lakenhalle) Ypres
Beautiful old town, buildings worth seeing. Oppressive museum. Lots of interesting information in the tourist information office.
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5월 5, 2024, Mont Noir (Ouest)
This slope is located on the border between Belgium and France. Very touristy and can therefore be busy. Beautiful views of the area.
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2월 22, 2024, Hellegat Forest
The name Hellegatbos refers to a deep ‘ravine’ at the bottom of the hillside (the ‘hole in hell’; ‘helle’ means ‘hill’). Especially in spring, Wood Anemone and Wild Bluebells provide a carpet of white and blue hues. At the foot of the mountain, a thick layer of clay emerges from which various springs emerge. Characteristic plants here are Marsh Marigold, Giant Horsetail and Wild Garlic. (Heuvelland Tourism)
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2월 21, 2024, Cloth Hall (Lakenhalle) Ypres
In 1173, historical sources first mention a Halla in Ypres: a covered hall where cloth was traded. It is probably a wooden construction. It is unclear whether there was also a belfry at that time. Construction of the imposing complex that we know today started around 1250 and was completed around 1378. It is Europe's largest civil complex in Gothic style. The importance of the Cloth Hall and the belfry for the city of Ypres can hardly be overestimated. It is a building complex with great symbolic value. This symbolism has changed greatly over the centuries. But throughout this history and changing symbolism for the Cloth Hall and the belfry of Ypres, there is one constant. The Cloth Hall and the belfry tower symbolize the city itself. When Ypres started building this complex in the mid-thirteenth century, the ambition was clear: to create a monumental building that reflected the civil power and worldly wealth of Ypres. At that time, Ypres was one of the three most powerful cities in Flanders, a rich and powerful county. The Cloth Hall must make this power and wealth clear. (Ypermuseum)
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11월 1, 2023, Hellegat Forest
nature speaks to us it's up to us to listen to it
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4월 16, 2023, The Bluff Memorial and Crater
Duty of memory, they lived through hell on earth so that we didn't walk in step!
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9월 19, 2022, Hellegat Forest
On the hillside of the Rodeberg lies the ominous-sounding Hellegatbos of just over 45 hectares. This area is recommended for a brisk walk. Don't be misled by its name: this forest will pleasantly surprise you with its natural beauty, diversity and beautiful views. As you descend from the top of the slope, the Hellegatbos reveals an increasingly varied biotope. In the summer of 2014, the Speelberg Kosmos was opened on the Rodeberg. Source: https://www.natuurenbos.be/rodeberg
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9월 19, 2022, Kemmelberg
Historical context: About 2,500 years ago, a Celtic community belonging to the Hallstatt culture settled on the Kemmelberg. The Celts built a fort and maintained a trading relationship with the Romans. During the First World War, the Kemmelberg was a strategic point and was heavily contested by the warring parties. During the spring offensive of 1918, German troops under General Friedrich Bertram Sixt von Armin took possession of the Kemmelberg on 25 April. The next day, a French counterattack took place, but the German troops advanced to the Dikkebusvijver. On 29 April, the German advance was halted, and the fighting continued until the end of July 1918. On 5 September, the Kemmelberg was recaptured by the Allied troops with the help of the Americans. After the fighting, the hill was bare and was replanted with deciduous trees. Archaeological excavations were carried out from the 1960s onwards. On the western flank is a French mass grave with the remains of more than 5,000 French soldiers who died in the First World War. At the top is a memorial column, the Monument Aux Soldats Français, erected in 1932 and inaugurated by General Lacappelle. The column is 17 metres high and depicts the Roman goddess of victory Victoria. The monument is called "Monument Aux Soldats Francais" and is popularly called "Den Engel". Originally the column was 18 metres high, on top of the column stood a laurel wreath with a French soldier's helmet on it, which however disappeared after a lightning strike in the 1970s. On the southern edge is the Kemmel command bunker, a former Cold War command bunker of the Belgian army, which has been set up as a war museum since the end of October 2009.
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9월 10, 2022, The Bluff Memorial and Crater
What war does to a landscape… Entry point for the walk “Ypres-salient – South”. On this narrow artificially raised ridge, resulting from 19th century excavations for the Ypres-Comines canal, discover how the landscape was mutilated by the war machine. Due to circumstances in the 19th century, the intended canal was never realized. Today you can still discover the scars of the Great War here on this site, better known as 'The Bluff'. This was the only place on the Flemish front where the Allies and not the Germans took the higher positions. The Bluff is a place on the front where the landscape has suffered seriously. The Bluf is one of the most dramatic war landscapes in Flanders Fields, with many large and small craters. A total of 455 fallen soldiers were given their final resting place here, spread across the cemeteries: Hedge Row Trenche Cemetery, Woods Cemetery and First D.C.L.I Cemetery - The Bluff. The visitors pavilion provides more information through a short film about what happened here during the Great War. You can discover many mine craters, shelters, bunkers and military cemeteries from WWI here. To look for traces of the past, appropriate footwear is recommended. A hiking trail winds around the mine craters and takes you into the bed of the old Ypres – Komen Canal. This experience path makes you think. You can easily spend half a day to discover all the cemeteries, the South information pavilion, mine craters and the no man's land. Recommendation: Wear sturdy walking shoes if you want to follow in the footsteps of the frontline soldiers. Spacious parking is provided on Palingbeekstraat or a smaller parking lot at the visitor center in Vaartstraat 7 Zillebeke.
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