The Inowłódz War Cemetery is the burial place of soldiers from World War I who died in battles in the Inowłódz area. It was established at the end of December 1914.
After the war, the fallen were moved to the cemetery from temporary graves, and in the interwar years, soldiers were also moved here from the non-existent cemetery in Spała. The cemetery is mainly the resting place of German soldiers, but also Austrian, Russian and many Poles who served in the armies of all three occupiers.
In December 1914, German troops occupied the area on the left side of the Pilica, all the way to Nowe Miasto. Inowłódz was in the middle of the front line. The Germans dug in on the mountains and fields of Inowłódz on the left side of the Pilica. The Muscovites had shelter in large state forests across the river. Throughout the fighting, Inowłódz changed hands.