It was as dramatic as it could get. When the clock struck 11 on the 11th day of November in 1918, representatives from Germany, Great Britain and France, who had gathered in a railway carriage in the Forest of Compigne near Paris, signed an armistice that ended World War I (WWI). That day, millions of people across the world had as much reason to rejoice as they did to mournmore than 8.5 million soldiers and an even larger number of civilians had perished over four years.
