, resting place of approximately 100,000 Italian soldiers. More than 650,000 died on the battlefields of
World War I. Fogliano Redipuglia lies at the eastern end of the shifting front of the
Italian Campaign against
Austria-Hungary (and
Germany) in
World War I, and today is home to Italy's largest war memorial on Monte Sei Busi in Redipuglia. The huge war memorial from 1938 contains the corpses of 39,857 identified Italian soldiers, and 69,330 unidentified. In a nearby cemetery are buried another around 14,000 Austro-Hungarian soldiers. Trench fortifications can be seen next to the war memorial, as well as a display of large World War I artillery pieces.
Pope Francis visited Redipuglia's military memorial on 13 September 2014 to mark the centenary of World War I to pray for those who died in all wars. ==References==