Germany concludes armistice with France in Compiegne, France during World War II. HD Stock Footage
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Germany concludes armistice with France in Compiegne, France during World War II.
The Armistice at Compiegne, France on 22nd June, 1940 between France and Germany during World War II. German officers including General William Keitel, accompany Chancellor Adolf Hitler as they walk past a German honor guard lined up, while a band plays the German National Anthem. French General Charles Huntziger and another officer arrive and enter a railway carriage (the same one in which Germany signed the 1918 armistice). Interiors of carriage showing French General Huntziger signing the documents. Adolf Hitler has left and is chatting with German officers outside. General Keitel presents the document to Hitler for countersigning. Hitler asks for a pen, and they drop it as Keitel hands it to Hitler. Keitel quickly retrieves it and Hitler signs. French General Huntziger steps down from the rail car and is escorted away with others of his party. Hitler expresses pure delight in chatting with members of his staff. Location: Compiegne France. Date: June 22, 1940.
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Railroad train carrying Marshal Ferdinand Foch to Compiegne, France for signing o...HD Stock Footage
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Railroad train carrying Marshal Ferdinand Foch to Compiegne, France for signing of Armistice ending World War I.
Views of the Chateau of Franc-port located close to the forest at Rethondes, near the town of Compiègne, where the German delegation was lodged during the World War 1armistice negotiations. On November 8, 1918, a steam locomotive pulls Marshal Foch's train through the railroad station in Compiègne, on the way to the armistice negotiations. Later, on November 11, 1918, after the Armistice is signed, the train is seen as it returns and slows to a stop at the station, in Compiègne. The train bears the name: Compagnie Internationale Des Wagon-Lits Et Des Grands Express Europeens. Several cars of the train are seen close up, including the voiture-restaurant and dining car number 2419 D, in which the armistice was actually signed. Several French soldiers are seen inside the train, and looking out its windows. A large group of French troops pose and celebrate in front of the train, parked in the station. Location: Compiegne France. Date: November 11, 1918.
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German officials and French dignitaries arrive at railway carriage for armistice ...HD Stock Footage
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German officials and French dignitaries arrive at railway carriage for armistice in Compiegne, France.
Fuhrer Adolf Hitler, Hermann Goering, Admiral Erich Raeder and French dignitaries arriving for armistice in Compiegne, France. Swastika draped over statue. Railway where treaty of WW I was signed. German troops march. Band plays. German troops in attention as Fuhrer adolf Hitler, Hermann Goering and Admiral Erich Raeder pass by. Officials approaching railway car stop and look at the statue of Ferdinand Foch. Officials standing at side of car look a plaque commemorating signing of WW I treaty. Adolf Hitler enters car for discussing treaty with France. Interior of railway shows Adolf Hitler, Goering and Admiral Raider seated at table. French officials arrive. German troops at attention. Charles Hunzinger enters a car. They salute and are seated at table for signing of treaty. View through windows of car showing Hitler, Goering and Admiral Raeder walking through rear door. Adolf Hitler and Goering come out of car after discussing treaty. Adolf Hitler, Goering and Admiral Raeder review German troops standing at attention beside road. View through windows of car shows French dignitaries at attention. Location: Compiegne France. Date: 1940.
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11th November 1918: The Armistice of Compiègne ends fighting in WW1
On the 11th November 1918, fighting on the First World War’s Western Front ended when representatives from the Allies and Germany signed the Armistice of Compiègne. Named after the location in which it was signed, the armistice was agreed at around 5:00 a.m. in a railway carriage that was part of Allied supreme commander Ferdinand Foch's private train. Designed to come into effect at 11:00 a.m. Paris time, the armistice was extended three times before the Treaty of Versailles finally came into force on the 10th January 1920 and formally ended the First World War.
In January 1918 President Woodrow Wilson of the USA had outlined his war aims in the Fourteen Points. These provided a framework for future peace, and an assumption that these terms would be the basis for an armistice agreement were a key factor in encouraging Germany to enter negotiations.
By the end of September, the German High Command realised that the German cause on the Western Front was doomed. The Kaiser was informed of the situation on the 29th September, and by the 5th October the German government had initiated contact with President Wilson of the United States to begin preparations for negotiating an armistice. However, the two sides didn’t come together until the 8th November because Britain, France and Italy were unwilling to enter discussions based on the 14 Points. By this point the German Revolution was about to result in the abdication of Kaiser Wilhelm II.
Under the terms of the Armistice they agreed to end the fighting and withdraw German forces to behind the Rhine. All infrastructure had to remain intact while the Allies were permitted to occupy the Rhineland and bridgeheads further east. German military equipment including aircraft and warships had to be surrendered, and Allied prisoners of war and interned civilians had to be released. The negotiation wasn’t really a negotiation: the German delegation was presented with the terms and had no option but to sign. The railway carriage in which they did so was later used by Hitler for France’s surrender to Nazi Germany in 1940.
German troops in Paris, Adolf Hitler at the Eiffel Tower and the French and the ...HD Stock Footage
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German troops in Paris, Adolf Hitler at the Eiffel Tower and the French and the German sign an armistice in Compiegne, France.
An armistice signed between the French and the Germans in Compiegne, France during World War II. A German soldier on horse back salutes. The German Army on horse back enters Paris. German troops cross the Arc de Triomphe. They march on the streets of Paris. A landscape view of Paris. German Chancellor Adolf Hitler at the Eiffel Tower near the Seine River with some officials. Hitler looks at a Nazi flag fluttering. Nazi posters and boards displayed in the streets of Paris. German troops with guns stand along a street. Ferdinand Foch's railway carriage. French and German officials enter the railway car in the Compiegne Forest (Same railroad car where Germany signed surrender in World War I). Hitler reads the armistice. The railway car in the Compiegne Forest. The railway car reads 'Voiture Restaurant' which means a dining car. German and French officials get down the dining car after the armistice is signed. Adolf Hitler and German Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel get down the car. Location: Compiegne France. Date: June 22, 1940.
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French Marshal Foch comes by vehicle, officers salute and walk with him in a fiel...HD Stock Footage
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French Marshal Foch comes by vehicle, officers salute and walk with him in a field.
French Marshal Ferdinand Foch comes by vehicle, officers salute and walk with him in a field. Vehicle stands on the field. Slanted wooden fences visible. (World War i; World War 1; WWI; WW1) Location: France. Date: 1918.
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AFTER HOURS BEAUVAIS-Wild Temptation
Pack of hounds chases a stag during the Annual Saint Hubert's hunt in Compiegne, ...HD Stock Footage
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Pack of hounds chases a stag during the Annual Saint Hubert's hunt in Compiegne, France.
Annual Saint Hubert's hunt in Compiegne, France. Pack of hounds chases a stag in field and into a stream where the stag continues trying to flee. The French sportsmen on horses follow the hounds on the scent of the deer. Location: Compiegne France. Date: November 14, 1938.
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Hitler Returns To Germany From France (1940) | British Pathé
In this archive footage from 1940, Nazi leader Adolf Hitler returns to Germany from France during World War II.
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(FILM ID:1978.01)
Unused / unissued material - dates and locations unclear or unknown.
France and Germany.
Commentary is Portuguese.
English translation:
The Führer visited the old imperial territories of Alsace and Lorraine.
Passing the Rhine Bridge at Kehl which was [partially] destroyed by the french.
Flying over the eleven French fortifications [of the German section of the Maginot Line].
[Music]
The monument to the creator of the Maginot Line, once seen as impregnable and which is today, for the most part, a pile of debris.
[Music]
The Führer in Strasbourg.
[Music]
On the return to Berlin, the Führer was hailed by the people during the trip with demonstrations of affection and of gratitute.
[Music]
The city of Berlin, meanwhile, prepares an unforgettable reception.
[Music]
The streets, from the station to the Reich Chancellery, were transformed into real flower carpets.
[Music]
The joy of the entire German nation received the Führer in the Reich's capital.
[Music]
IT'S A FILM
Travel shot of convoy of military vehicles crossing bridge. Aerial shot landscape. Various shots Adolf Hitler with looking a bombed out bunker with other German officers. C/U of statue of Andre Maignot. Travel shot from convoy passing troops giving Nazi salute, the Fuhrer salutes back from one of the convoy vehicles. Various shots convoy passing through Strasbourg (during occupation). The convoy stops in front of cathedral. Various shots of cathedral. Back view of Hitler looking at cathedral.
Various shots blonde girl presenting basket to Hitler as he stands in door of train. M/S little boy in Hitler Youth uniform shaking hands with Hitler. Travel shot from train passing through countryside, a farmer sitting on plough in field salutes train. Travelling shot passing crowd at German station, many salute. C/U Swastika flags. Various shots surging crowds of euphoric people waiting for Hitler to drive past, policemen hold them back. Various shots Hitler waving from balcony to enormous crowd - in Berlin.
Closing title reads: Um Filme.
BRITISH PATHÉ'S STORY
Before television, people came to movie theatres to watch the news. British Pathé was at the forefront of cinematic journalism, blending information with entertainment to popular effect. Over the course of a century, it documented everything from major armed conflicts and seismic political crises to the curious hobbies and eccentric lives of ordinary people. If it happened, British Pathé filmed it.
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France surrenders to Germany at Compiegne. The London Blitz. President Roosevelt ...HD Stock Footage
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France surrenders to Germany at Compiegne. The London Blitz. President Roosevelt signs Lend Lease Act.
German troops in formation outside the railroad car, in Compiegne, France, where Germany surrendered to France, in World War I. Now, it is being used ironically, by Hitler to secure the surrender of France on June 22, 1940. A formation of German German Dornier Do-17 bombers in flight. Aerial views of the London ablaze during the Blitz. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Lend Lease Act. Men load a truck with Lend Lease materials in boxes marked, U.S.A. View of freight train leaving a switch yard. View of freight train passing by with cargo marked 'Bullard Machine Tools, Bridgeport, Conn. Location: Compiegne France. Date: June 22, 1940.
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Remembrance Day
Remembrance Day | veterans day |Armistice Day
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Remembrance Day (Armistice Day) is commemorated every year on 11 November to mark the armistice signed between the Allies of WW1 I and Germany at Compiègne, France, for the cessation of hostilities on the Western Front of WW1, which took effect at eleven o'clock in the morning—the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918. The date was declared a national holiday in many allied nations, and coincides with Remembrance Day and Veterans Day, public holidays.
Remembrance Day (sometimes known informally as Poppy Day) is a memorial day observed in Commonwealth of Nations member states since the end of WW1 to remember the members of their armed forces who have died in the line of duty. Following a tradition inaugurated by King George V in 1919, the day is also marked by remembrances in many non-Commonwealth countries. Remembrance Day is observed on 11 November in most countries to recall the end of hostilities of WW1 on that date in 1918. Hostilities formally ended at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, in accordance with the armistice signed by representatives of Germany and the Entente between 5:12 and 5:20 that morning. (At the 11th hour refers to the passing of the 11th hour, or 11:00 am.) WW1 officially ended with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles on 28 June 1919.
The memorial evolved out of Armistice Day, which continues to be marked on the same date. The initial Armistice Day was observed at Buckingham Palace, commencing with King George V hosting a Banquet in Honour of the President of the French Republic[3] during the evening hours of 10 November 1919. The first official Armistice Day was subsequently held on the grounds of Buckingham Palace the following morning.
The red remembrance poppy has become a familiar emblem of Remembrance Day due to the poem In Flanders Fields written by Canadian physician Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae. After reading the poem, Moina Michael, a professor at the University of Georgia, wrote the poem, We Shall Remember, and swore to wear a red poppy on the anniversary. The custom spread to Europe and the countries of the British Empire and Commonwealth within three years. Madame Anne E. Guerin tirelessly promoted the practice in Europe and the British Empire. In the UK Major George Howson fostered the cause with the support of General Haig. Poppies were worn for the first time at the 1921 anniversary ceremony. At first real poppies were worn. These poppies bloomed across some of the worst battlefields of Flanders in WW1; their brilliant red colour became a symbol for the blood spilled in the global conflict.
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Bladestorm: The Hundred Years' War - Battle of Domremy (French Forces) (Part 31) [HD]
First appearance of Joan of Arc. Just after mere 20 hours of gameplay...
Technical: I found out video stream has a broken segment couple of seconds long at 5:33. This caused some audio desynch. I tried to fix it to the best of my ability.
Le Spectacle des Lumières - Teaser
Le Spectacle des Lumières est un évènement Lumière et Son gratuit, culturel et handi- accueillant qui aura lieu les 28, 29 et 30 mai, à 21h45, rue de Roger Couttolenc, face au bâtiment de l’Université de Technologie de Compiègne (Benjamin Franklin). Étant donné sa thématique culturelle (L’histoire de l’impossible – du feu à Internet), la caractère technique, artistique et innovant de l’UTC, et l’année 2015 étant déclarée par l’UNESCO comme l’année internationale, ce projet représente bien la ville de Compiègne et son université face à la France dans cette année spéciale. Ce projet sera également inscrit au calendrier officiel des évènements de la Lumière en France (ministère de la culture).
Création et Mise en Scéne: Yuri GOMES DE ABREU
ARMISTICE DAY - WikiVidi Documentary
Armistice Day is commemorated every year on 11 November to mark the armistice signed between the Allies of World War I and Germany at Compiègne, France at 5:45 am, for the cessation of hostilities on the Western Front of World War I, which took effect at eleven o'clock in the morning—the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918. But, according to Thomas R. Gowenlock, an intelligence officer with the US First Division, shelling from both sides continued for the rest of the day, only ending at nightfall. The armistice initially expired after a period of 36 days. A formal peace agreement was only reached when the Treaty of Versailles was signed the following year. The date is a national holiday in France, and was declared a national holiday in many Allied nations. In some countries Armistice Day coincides with Remembrance Day and Veterans Day, and other public holidays. Armistice Day is not celebrated in Germany,, but a German national day of mourning, Volkst...
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Junior Watson @ The Grand Dell Saloon / Blues After Hours
Junior Watson performs Pee Wee Crayton's Blues After Hours during Jimmy Mulleniux's birthday celebrations at the Grand Dell Saloon. Featured in the band are Kedar Roy (bass), June Core (drums) and Sid Morris (piano).
French Marshal Ferdinand Foch and Belgian King Albert at funeral of Cardinal Merc...HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
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French Marshal Ferdinand Foch and Belgian King Albert at funeral of Cardinal Mercier in Belgium.
Funeral cortege of Cardinal Mercier arrives. Funeral procession with horse-drawn carriage, priests and others arrives at church. Crowd lined up. Very large parade on the streets for funeral ceremony. King Albert of Belgium and French Marshal Ferdinand Foch walk with the funeral cortege. Location: Belgium. Date: January 1926.
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Paris-Roubaix 2015 : départ de Compiègne
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French military leader Ferdinand Foch is greeted by Raymond Poincare in France. HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
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French military leader Ferdinand Foch is greeted by Raymond Poincare in France.
President of the French Republic Raymond Poincare in France. Poincare walks on a road. French officers follow him. Troops lined on a street. A building in the background. French flags in view. A crowd on the streets. People carry flowers. Raymond Poincare meets French military leader Ferdinand Foch. Several men stand in the background. Men march on the streets. Location: France. Date: 1920.
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