by anzac_admin | Jun 26, 2022
The Turks head area with the water tanks for the water supply of the hospitals. This is the central point of the peninsula where the administrative services of the hospitals were established. There were also water tanks, with the water coming from the desalination plant at the Water Pier.
by anzac_admin | Jun 25, 2022
The site of the 18th British Stationary Hospital
by anzac_admin | Jun 25, 2022
The Cross of Sacrifice is not an autonomous structure, but a sculpture inserted in construction that houses the Altar of Memory and it consists of two columns, which are crowned with a circular arch and a small roof. In general, the cemetery area is neither covered as a whole, as in the British cemeteries of Macedonia nor do the burials follow a strict military order. Morphologically, the location but also the Altar and the Cross are more similar to the constructions of the cemeteries of Gallipoli.
by anzac_admin | Jun 25, 2022
French and British camps and hospitals between Moudros and Lychna at a short distance from the sea. Houses with administrative areas were built near the pier and the camps were there, too. There was a camp for the Ottoman prisoners of war among those they built.
by anzac_admin | Jun 24, 2022
The Turks Head area where the hospital headquarters used to be. This is the central point throughout the peninsula, where the administrative services and various auxiliary services were established either in tents or in barracks.