because the soldiers died in the flanders fields which where the poppies were grown
because when they were fighting in both the wars in France in the battlefields when the war had finished there was Poppy's growing everywhere.
In the runup to Rembrance Day, 11th November, we wear poppies to represent the fact that after World War One, the only thing that grew in the war fields was poppies.
They still grow well. It's just that Law Enforcement Agencies don't typically have a sense of humor when they find people cultivating them privately. The problem is poppies can be used to make several highly controlled narcotic substances.
Rosemary stands for remembrance, and so it is used to remember those who have given their lives in war.
no but it used to be called Hollywoodland
Poppies made into wreaths or even just a simple poppy. People put rosemary on their clothes, because that is what grew on the hills in Gallipoli. LEST WE FORGET!
Yes. Poppies are also used for Remembrance Day, or Armistice Day, on 11 November.
They usually keep it somewhere safe but most of them get lost.
Remembrance Day is also known as Poppy Day...They wear red poppies...
The colour/color of poppy species include red, blue, white, orange, pink, purple and yellow. The colour of poppy traditionally used for Remembrance Day is red.
My explanation (not being British!) is that the fields of France (where the deadliest battles on the western front took place) were covered in poppies at the end of the war.
The remembrance poppy has been used since 1920 to commemorate soldiers who have died in war. Inspired by the World War I poem "In Flanders Fields", they were first used by the American Legion to commemorate American soldiers who died in that war.
Poppies are often used as a symbol of remembrance for those who have died in war. They are commonly associated with honoring and paying tribute to veterans and those who have made sacrifices for their country.
The poppies of remembrance honor the soldiers who died during war time. The funds gathered from the sales of poppies are usually used to help disabled American Veterans. They have been a symbol of the fallen American soldier since 1920.
Red poppies symbolise remembrance.The story goes that, following one of the bloodiest battles of World War I, in the fields of Flanders in western Europe,when the ground was completely churned up and muddied, thousands of red poppies sprang up. The seeds had lain dormant in the soil and, after being aerated with the churning of the soil from the soldiers' boots and fertilised with their blood, the poppies grew abundantly, springing forth new life from death.This is why poppies are worn on Remembrance Day (commemorating Armistice Day) as well as ANZAC Day in Australia and New Zealand, and other solemn occasions when we remember the soldiers who fought or even gave their lives for our freedom.Another reason poppies came to such prominence in association with World War I is because of how they were immortalised in that most famous poem of WWI, In Flanders Fields, written by John McCrae, a Canadian surgeon attached to the 1st Field Artillery Brigade. This poem is spoken at memorial services everywhere on both ANZAC Day and Remembrance Day, and remains one of the most famous Australian War poems ever written.
I'm assuming that what you meant to ask was: "Why are poppies used as a symbol of Remembrance Day and the horrors of the Great War"? Poppies are special, botanically, in that they usually only bloom on 'disturbed ground'. The bombed and shelled battlefields were churned many times over by shellfire and explosions. when the battles subsided, especially in Belgium, poppies bloomed in abundance marking the thousands of killed soldiers who had been sacrificed on, what many feel, were futile and politically invalid pursuits. Firstmate
November 11th is Armistice Day, which marks the end of the 1st World War. The nearest Sunday to November 11th is Remembrance Sunday. Both days are used to remember and honour those who lost their lives in the two world wars and other more recent conflicts. People wear poppies as a mark of remembrance, and these are sold in the UK by the British Legion to raise money to help injured soldiers and their families.
Poppies are a wild flower, we wear them because in the war, there were poppies on the battleground.