2008Who is officially recognized as the last surviving French combatant from the First World War?
Lazare Ponticelli, born in Italy and later naturalized as French, is officially recognized as France’s last surviving combatant of the First World War. His story is significant both as a living link to the generation of "poilus" and for his steadfast participation in annual remembrance ceremonies at the 'monument aux morts' until the year before his death in 2008 at the remarkable age of 110. Ponticelli requested that his state funeral be modest, with a memorial mass at Les Invalides honoring all his fallen comrades—emphasizing collective memory over individual glory. On March 17, 2008, this wish was fulfilled as President Nicolas Sarkozy led the nation in unveiling a simple stone tablet, inviting the youth of France to remember the sacrifices of the 8.5 million countrymen who served during the Great War.