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Rusthof cemetery

Coordinates:52°07′46″N5°22′33″E/ 52.1295°N 5.3757°E/52.1295; 5.3757
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Rusthof cemetery(Dutch:begraafplaats Rusthof)[a]is located at the Dodeweg 31 inLeusden,the Netherlands.It is the largest cemetery that services the nearby[1]town ofAmersfoort.

People

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It is a partly civilian, partly military cemetery. In the military sections are the graves ofWorld War IIvictims, including 238 soldiers and pilots killed in action from theBritish Commonwealth,Poland,BelgiumandFrance,also World War II military victims fromYugoslavia,Greece,Hungary,Romania,Portugal,CzechoslovakiaandItaly(World War I and II), as well as 865 soldiers from theSoviet Union.[2][3][4]A number of Soviet victims came from the nearbyKamp Amersfoort,including 101Central Asianprisoners. Most of them wereUzbeksor citizens ofSamarqand,and were executed in woods near the camp, in April 1942.[5]The Soviet soldiers were eventually reburied in 1947/1948 in what is called "the Russian Honor Field" or "the Soviet Field of Glory".[4][6]

Joan Röell(1844–1914), who served as Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 1894 to 1897, is buried there.[citation needed]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^"Rusthof" means "place of rest".

References

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  1. ^ANWB Topografische Atlas Nederland,Topografische Dienst and ANWB, 2005.
  2. ^"Rusthof, Amersfoort (Old Leusden) General Cemetery"
  3. ^List of Soviet military buried at Rusthof(in Russian)
  4. ^ab"Polizeiliches Durchgangslager Amersfoort (PDA)"
  5. ^Rustam Qobil (2017-05-09)."Why were 101 Uzbeks killed in the Netherlands in 1942?".BBC.Retrieved2017-05-09.
  6. ^"Soviet Field of Glory"(in Russian)
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52°07′46″N5°22′33″E/ 52.1295°N 5.3757°E/52.1295; 5.3757