EN - Anzac Gallipoli Tours .com | FR - Anzac Gallipoli Tours .com
Tuesday 30th of September 2025

Our websites


terres de memoire Terresdememoire.eu
terres de memoire Terresdememoire.eu
anzac gallipoli tours Anzac-gallipoli-tours.com
battlefield tour Battlefield-tours.fr
australian battlefield tours Australian-battlefield-tours.fr
somme battlefield tours Somme-battlefield-tours.fr
WW1 tours WW1-tours.fr
villers bretonneux tours Villers-bretonneux-tours.fr
France battlefield tours France-battlefield-tours.fr

Private Tours



Gallipoli trench map WW1 A truly exceptional experience!

Taking a Private Tour is a very convenient way of visiting the Gallipoli Battlefields - Either to follow a normal itinerary, but with the privacy and comfort of having your own personal guide and vehicle, or to enable you to visit or spend more time in areas of specific interest to you. Terres de Memoire can also help you plan this tailor made visit. For added convenience your expert, English-speaking guide can even collect you directly from Istanbul and take you back there after your visit.

A Private Tour also enables you to go to places which are not always visited on the main tours; like for example, Suvla Bay or the Asian side of the Dardenelles. This is another interesting place to visit - especially to see the many old forts and guns that were left behind and to better explore the naval battles.

Please contact us for more details.
For more information or to make a reservation please contact us.




anzac-gallipoli-tours More details, contact us.




After the Armistice the Imperial War Graves Commission started the huge task of clearing the battlefields and reburying the dead.
31 commonwealth cemeteries were created containing 19,000 men - only 6000 identified. A further 2500 of the dead believed to be buried among the unidentified are commemorated in the cemeteries by Special Memorials and the other 27.000 unidentified or missing men are commemorated on memorials to the missing such as:
The Helles Memorial, Lone Pine Memorial, Chunuck Bair, Hill 60 and Twelve Tree Copse Memorials.