UK falling silent to mark Armistice Day
The country will fall silent at 11am
Last updated 11th Nov 2022
The UK will fall silent today as the country marks Armistice Day.
At 11am today (11th November) people will take the time to pause and pay their respects to the past and present Armed Forces community, at the exact time and date that formal hostilities were ended in World War One.
Planet Rock will also be taking part, falling silent at 11am.
Services across the UK today
Services will be held across the country for the anniversary of the end of the First World War.
The Duke and Duchess of Gloucester are due to attend the National Memorial Arboretum Armistice Day Service in Staffordshire with services also being held in London, Edinburgh, Belfast and Portsmouth.
In Edinburgh, the city’s depute lord provost, councillor Lezley Marion Cameron, will join veterans, serving personnel and the public to pay tribute at the city’s Garden of Remembrance.
Foreign Secretary James Cleverly will attend a remembrance service hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris.
Remembrance Day on Sunday
On Sunday 13th November, the National Service of Remembrance will be held at the Cenotaph on Whitehall, London.
Why do people wear poppies on Remembrance Day?
The symbol of the poppy dates all the way back to the First World War as they grew on the battlefields of the Western Front in Europe.
After the death of his friend in Ypres, Belgium in 1915, Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae was inspired by the sight of poppies growing in fields.
Amazed by the war memorial he proceeded to write the now-famous poem 'In Flanders Fields'.
Britain began to use the poppy symbol shortly after the war in 1921 when the Royal British Legion was formed.
Though people nowadays tend to go for paper or enamel poppy pins, they were previously made out of silk.
World War 1 timeline
28 June 1914: Archduke Francis Ferdinand is assassinated. Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia, beginning World War I
2-7 August 1914: British forces arrive in France
6-12 September 1914: The First Battle of the Marne. 13,000 British casualties with 1,700 dead. 67,700 Germans dead
5 November 1914: Britain and France declare war on the Ottoman Empire
17 July 1915: Women demonstrate the right to work in war industries
1 July 1916 - 18 November 1916: Battle of the Somme. 420,00 British casualties. 1,499,000 casualties overall.
6 April 1917: The United States declares war on Germany
20 November 1917: First large-scale use of tanks in combat at Cambrai, France
11 November 1918: Germany signs the Armistice at Compiègne, ending World War I.