Replica cemetery installed to mark Armistice centenary
A replica Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery has been installed at Cardiff Castle to mark the centenary of Armistice.
The 330 headstones placed in the courtyard represent the more than 30,000 Welsh men and women who gave their lives during the First World War.
Each wooden headstone, signifying 100 Welsh war casualties, features an inscription and badge to show the various regiments and divisions of soldiers who did not return home.
A replica Stone of Remembrance - Sir Edwin Lutyens' contribution to CWGC cemeteries - stands at the head of the replica cemetery.
The installation aims to give visitors an insight into some of the 23,000 Commonwealth War Graves Commission sites around the world.
The replica cemetery is accompanied by an exhibition, Shaping Remembrance, at the castle's Firing Line Museum.
This includes a letter from the father of poet Hedd Wyn, which has not been on public display before.
Wyn died in the first day of fighting on Pilckem Ridge during the Battle of Passchendaele and is buried at CWGC's Artillery Wood Cemetery in Belgium.
It is estimated well over 30,000 Welsh men and women died during the First World War, though an exact figure is impossible to calculate.
CWGC commemorates more than 27,000 war casualties from Welsh regiments. Thousands more died while serving in other units.