This year marks 100 years since the end of World War I.
700,Submission Season 1 Episode 1 (2016)000 British soldiers lost their lives in the war, which was fought from 1914 to 1918. The fallen soldiers are being commemorated at The Tower of London in the British capital with a pretty spectacular light show.
SEE ALSO: War and Peace: 10 Photos Commemorating 100 Years Since WWI10,000 individual flames are being lit every night around the 950-year-old castle in central London. The flames will be lit from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. every night until Armistice day on November 11th -- the day marking the truce signed in 1918.
The installation, located in the old moat of the fortress, is entitled "Beyond the Deepening Shadow."
The installation was designed by artist Tom Piper, who previously worked on the 2014 installation "Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red" -- a project which involved 800,000 ceramic flowers being spread throughout the moat surrounding The Tower of London.
The title of this year's installation derives from a war sonnet by poet Mary Borden, which reads:
"They do not know that in this shadowed place/ It is your light they see upon my face."
The torches will be lit for the last time on November 11th.
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