Thank you.
Whilst the Commonwealth War Graves take an almost universal style, the German cemeteries do vary between the First and Second World Wars and in design and layout.
I do always wonder for how long the cemeteries will stay as they are. There is certainly nobody alive today who fought in the Great War, nor indeed anyone born between 1914 and 1918. Time is calling for those left who can even remember the Second World War. Nothing lasts forever. At some future point - certainly not within our lifetimes - nature will take back the land, which (I guess) is somehow appropriate.
As a complete aside, I do want to visit all of London’s ‘Magnificent Seven’ cemeteries, where nature does (in part at least) reclaim the area. I don’t think it’s a bad thing at all. I have done one (Stoke Newington) so, six to go.
PS The grave of the Jewish Sondermann, killed almost to the day in 1917, is poignant. Whilst we will probably never know, any family that he might have had would (in all probability) have been murdered within 30 years of his death.