- en.wikipedia.org HartmannswillerkopfToggle the table of contents. Hartmannswillerkopf. 11 languages. ... The Hartmannswillerkopf seen from the Molkenrain. Highest point.
- ...the First World War, and notably 1915, when Hartmannswillerkopf was considered to be a vital strategic position by both the French and German armies.
- google.com.tr travel/entity/key/…Vieil Armand veya Hartmannsweiler Kopf olarak da bilinen Hartmannswillerkopf, Fransa'nın Grand Est bölgesinin Vosges dağlarında piramidal kayalık bir...
- tripadvisor.com Attraction_Review-g5074534-…The French national monument known as Hartmannswillerkopf site (HWK) recently reopened in 2012. Previously it was known as Vieil Armand.
- learngerman.dw.com en/remembering-great-wars-man-…The Hartmannswillerkopf was called man-eater mountain "because thousands of men died here for absolutely nothing," Kretz said.
- tourisme-mulhouse.com en/experiences/…The Hartmannswillerkopf is an important place to remember the sacrifices of those who fought and to understand the complicated history of Alsace.
- archdaily.com 888059/hartmannswillerkopf-franco-…Since the First World War, the battlegrounds of the Hartmannswillerkopf became for many French and Germans a sacred mountain.
- booking.com landmark/fr/hartmannswillerkopf.en-…Find hotels near Hartmannswillerkopf, France online. Good availability and great rates. Book online, pay at the hotel. No reservation costs.
- historynet.com hallowed-ground-…The following day, however, the 8th Jäger Battalion, accompanied by the major and his remaining men, took Hartmannswillerkopf yet again.
- visit.alsace en/239003241-the-hartmannswillerkopf…" Immerse yourself in the remembrance of the Great War on the emblematic site of Hartmannswillerkopf. Known as the “mountain of death” or the...
- google.com travel/hotels/entity/…Hartmannswillerkopf, also known as the Vieil Armand or Hartmannsweiler Kopf is a pyramidal rocky spur in the Vosges mountains of the Grand Est region...
- my-weekend-in-alsace.com hartmannswillerkopf-…To the south of the Route des Crêtes, on a spur at an altitude of more than 900m, stands the Vieil-Armand (or Hartmannswillerkopf, often abbreviated to HWK).