- landes2016-82
- landes2016-81
- landes2016-80
- landes2016-76
- landes2016-75
- landes2016-74
- landes2016-72
- landes2016-71
- landes2016-70
- landes2016-69
- landes2016-66
- landes2016-65
- landes2016-64
- landes2016-61
- landes2016-57-Panorama
- landes2016-56
- landes2016-53-Panorama
- landes2016-51
- landes2016-46-Panorama
- landes2016-45
- landes2016-44
- landes2016-43
- landes2016-42
- landes2016-41
- landes2016-40
- landes2016-39
- landes2016-38
- landes2016-36
- landes2016-35
- landes2016-34
- landes2016-32
- landes2016-31
- landes2016-30
- landes2016-27
- landes2016-26
- landes2016-25
- landes2016-24
- landes2016-23
- landes2016-19
- landes2016-16
- landes2016-15
- landes2016-14
- landes2016-12
- landes2016-11
- landes2016-7
- landes2016-6
- landes2016-5
- landes2016-4
- landes2016-3
- landes2016-2
Oradour
On 10 June 1944, the village of Oradour-sur-Glane in Haute-Vienne in the Nazi-occupied France was destroyed, when 642 of its inhabitants, including women and children, were massacred by a Nazi Waffen-SS company. A new village was built nearby after the war, but French president Charles de Gaulle ordered the original maintained as a permanent memorial and museum.