Belgium. It borders the Flemish Coast to the North, the Bruges Ommeland to the Northeast, the Leie Region to the East and France to the South and West.
Colonel McCrae was in Canada when he wrote In Flanders Fields. He was in hospital after being shot.
John McCrae wrote "In Flanders Fields". But there were others that wrote poetry.http://wartimecanada.ca/categories/poetry
Flanders field was the battlefront in Flanders during World War 1. There died a lot of British soldiers, so one of those British soldiers wrote a poem: In Flanders fields. Flanders is located in Belgium. It lies in the north of Belgium and they speak Dutch (Flemish).
More information is necessary.If you are referring to the poem "In Flanders Fields" (written in 1915) then it is in the public domain. If you mean the book "In Flanders Fields: The 1917 Campaign," by Leon Wolff then the copyright would, in all likelihood, belong to either the author or whomever he assigned the copyright to because the book was written in 1958. Just the phrase "Flanders Fields" would not qualify for copyright protection but may be registered as a trademark.
Flanders is in Belgium.
I think mostly because a Canadian wrote the poem "Flanders Fields". Flanders was allegedly a generic name for battlefields in the county of Flanders in Belgium. Canada fought many of their most important battles there; Ypres, The Somme and Passchendaele. John MacCrae wrote the poem during the battle of the Somme, in Flanders.
In Flanders Fields - John McCrae
Flanders Fields is the name given to the battlefields from World War I. The fields are located between West Flanders and East Flanders in Belgium.
magazine article on the 75th anniversary of the poem, ''In Flanders Fields''
The novelist who wrote A Dog Of Flanders in 1872 was Marie Louise de la Ramée. The book was published under her pseudonym of "Ouida."
The Magnetic Fields
The foe referred to in the poem "In Flanders Fields" by John McCrae is the enemy soldiers fighting on the opposing side during World War I. They are portrayed as the adversaries to the soldiers and victims memorialized in Flanders Fields.