Lone Pine Cemetery

Gallipoli Peninsula


Lone Pine is perhaps the most moving of all the Anzac cemeteries. Australian forces captured the Turkish positions here on the afternoon of 6 August 1915. During the battle, which was staged in an area the size of a soccer field, more than 4000 men died and thousands more were injured.

The tombstones carry touching epitaphs and the cemetery includes the grave of the youngest soldier to die here, a boy of just 14. The remains of trenches can be seen just behind the parking area.

The trees that shaded the cemetery were swept away by a forest fire in 1994, leaving only one: a lone pine planted from the seed of the original solitary tree, which stood here at the beginning of the battle and gave the battlefield its name.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Gallipoli Peninsula attractions

1. Johnston's Jolly

0.16 MILES

Allied cemetery 200m from Lone Pine cemetery, accessed by a road that marks what was the thin strip of no-man's land between the Turkish and Allied…

2. Kanlısırt Kitabesi

0.22 MILES

Kanlısırt Kitabesi describes the battle of Lone Pine from the Turkish viewpoint.

5. 57 Alay Cemetery

0.55 MILES

Cemetery and monument for the Ottoman 57th Regiment. This regiment was led by Mustafa Kemal (later Atatürk) and was responsible for halting the Anzac…

7. Beach (Hell Spit) Cemetery

0.57 MILES

Cemetery a short drive north along the coastal road from Brighton Beach. More than 300 Australian, British and New Zealand soldiers are buried here.

  • placement: superzone
  • path: Destinations/POIs/superzone
  • possible size: [970, 250], [970, 90], [728, 90], [1, 1],
  • targeting:
    {
      "url": "turkey/gallipoli-peninsula/attractions/lone-pine-cemetery/a/poi-sig/1249549/1004509",
      "destination": "Gallipoli-Peninsula",
      "continent": "Europe",
      "country": "Türkiye",
      "region": "Gallipoli-Peninsula",
      "position": "superzone"
    }