Monaco Cemetery

Cemetery in Monaco From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Monaco Cemetery (French: Cimetière de Monaco) is a cemetery in La Colle, Principality of Monaco.[1]

Location
CountryMonaco
Coordinates43.72926°N 7.41163°E / 43.72926; 7.41163
TypePublic, non-denominational
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Monaco Cemetery
Interactive map of Monaco Cemetery
Details
Location
CountryMonaco
Coordinates43.72926°N 7.41163°E / 43.72926; 7.41163
TypePublic, non-denominational
Websitewww.mairie.mc/poles/pratique/cimetiere/le-cimetiere
Find a GraveMonaco Cemetery
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History

In 2015, computer screens were installed throughout the cemetery to help visitors locate specific tombs.[2][3]

On 27 August 2015 Albert II, Prince of Monaco dedicated a memorial stele in honour of foreign Jews who were taken from Monegasque hotels by the Nazis during the night of 27–28 August 1942.[4]

In 2024, 200 tombs were moved from the lower part of the cemetery to make room for the construction of the new Charles III strip.[5] In 2025, the cemetery started to build a new square containing 200 new spaces, to enhance the capacity of the crematorium, and to build an underground parking area with connecting elevators.[6]

Description

The cemetery contained 2350 tombs until 2014, when 198 more were built.[1] Its columbarium holds 546 boxes. The dispersion of ashes is done in the lower Jardin du Souvenir (Garden of the Memory), in a container that is emptied in the cemetery's underground ossuary when full.[7] It is open to the public from 8am to 7pm in the summer and from 8am to 6pm in the winter.[1]

On-site connected devices enable visitors to easily find a grave by its occupant's name. The concession for a grave lasts 30 years. The cemetery computer system is programmed to ping the municipality when a concession is about to expire.[2]

Many sculptures in the cemetery were designed by Umberto Bassignani.[8]

Notable burials

There are two Commonwealth War Graves Commission graves at the cemetery. They are the graves of two British soldiers of the First World War; Private A. C. V. Dyer of the Royal Army Medical Corps, who died in May 1917 aged 22, and Captain Leo Lucas Ralli (of the Ralli baronets) of the Army Service Corps who died in April 1917 aged 33.[13]

References

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