Manchester Cathedral to take part in Battle’s Over – commemorating 100 years since the end of WWI

  • News
  • 5 November 2018
Manchester Cathedral to take part in Battle’s Over – commemorating 100 years since the end of WWI

On Sunday 11 November, Manchester Cathedral will play its part in Battle’s Over, an international commemoration marking 100 years since the guns fell silent at the end of World War I.

Organised by Pageantmaster Bruno Peek LVO OBE OPR, Battle’s Over takes place on November 11th 2018, with events throughout the United Kingdom, Channel Islands, the Isle of Man, and at scores of locations overseas, including New Zealand, Ireland, Australia, Bermuda, France, Belgium, Canada, the United States and Germany.

It begins at 6am with over 1,000 lone pipers playing Battle’s O’er, a traditional Scottish air played after a battle, outside cathedrals and other individual locations throughout the country and overseas, following which a specially written tribute will be read out.
At 6.55pm buglers will sound the Last Post at more than 1,000 locations, where at 7pm WW1 Beacons of Light will be lit in a tribute signifying the light of peace that emerged from the darkness of four years of war.

Then at 7.05pm over 1,000 churches and cathedrals will ring their bells as part of Ringing Out for Peace organised in association with the Central Council of Church Bell Ringers, which represents 65 societies of ringers from the British Isles and overseas. Also at 7.05, more than 140 town criers will perform a specially written Cry for Peace Around the World, the first of them in New Zealand and then across the globe through the various time zones.

Manchester Cathedral will participate in the events above. In addition to these events, Manchester Cathedral will hold a Sung Eucharist for Remembrance Sunday at 10.30am. At 12.30pm, our bell ringers will return to the bell tower for the first time since the start of the repair work on the tower, in June 2017, to attempt a quarter peal to mark the Centenary of the Armistice.

All of the events are open to the public. Please join us as we pay tribute to the millions killed or wounded in battle.