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7 World War I soldiers given military burial after their remains were discovered during gas pipeline construction

Honoring the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Sentinels reflect on honor of guarding the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier on its 100th anniversary 05:22

British and Canadian authorities have given seven soldiers killed more than a century ago in World War I a full military burial after their remains were discovered during a gas pipeline construction near Ypres, Belgium.

The soldiers were found in two separate burial sites near the Belgian town at the heart of the Flanders Fields, where in 1914-18 hundreds of thousands perished in a muddy, shell-churned hellscape.

The ceremony took place Thursday at the New Irish Farm Commonwealth War Grave near Ypres.

Belgium WWI Burial
Canadian Army pallbearers kneel next to the coffin of World War I soldier, Canadian Private John Lambert of the Newfoundland Regiment, during a burial ceremony with full military honors at the Irish Farm Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery in Ypres, Belgium, on June 30, 2022.  Olivier Matthys / AP

In total, 63 sets of World War I soldiers' remains were uncovered by archaeologists during the work between 2014 and 2016.

"We remember, we reconnect with Private John Lambert. He was a mechanic making 40 cents a day ... signed up to make one dollar a day and immediately gave 60 cents a day to his sister," said Reverend Gary Watt, referring to one of the soldiers, Canadian Private John Lambert of the Newfoundland Regiment.

Lambert was identified through DNA. He died on August 16, 1917.

"He exaggerated his age in order to answer more willingly and more readily the call to serve freedom and democracy," Watt continued. "Private John Lambert had common sense of the common good. He knew that complacency would not stop the robbing of freedom."

Five of the remains were from unknown British soldiers, and one unknown German soldier was also reburied. Archaeologists have discovered artifacts that link the unknown soldiers to Britain and Germany.

The evolution of DNA technology has allowed for the identification of more and more unknown soldiers from World War I. Earlier this month, a great-great-nephew of English poet William Wordsworth — who was recently identified by DNA research — was given a funeral ceremony in France, 105 years after he died.

In the U.S., the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency routinely identifies the remains of fallen soldiers through DNA as well as dental and anthropological analysis.

In 2006, the remains of U.S. Army Pvt. Francis Lupo was the first World War I casualty to be recovered and identified by the agency.

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