Eighty years after thousands of allied airborne troops parachuted into the Nazi-occupied Netherlands in a daring military offensive, their modern counterparts have made the same jump.
Paratroopers from eight Nato-member countries, including the UK, US, Portugal and Spain, parachuted from 12 aircraft into Ginkel Heath, a nature reserve near the Dutch town of Ede, on Saturday.
Seven hundred paratroopers took part in the jump, including the Red Devils, the British army’s freefall parachute display team.
The event commemorates the anniversary of the Battle of Arnhem, part of Operation Market Garden, a manoeuvre intended to create a route for the allied forces into northern Germany in September 1944.
Among those to parachute into the occupied Netherlands were 1,900 allied airborne soldiers from Britain’s 4th Parachute Brigade.
The plan involved seizing key bridges with a combination of airborne forces – known as Market – with land forces – Garden – joining them.
But the airborne forces’ landing zones were about nine miles from the bridge at Arnhem, losing them the element of surprise and giving the Nazi troops time to build blockades.
While the operation succeeded in capturing the Dutch cities of Eindhoven and Nijmegen, it failed in its key objective – securing the bridge at Arnhem.
A defensive battle was fought, which consisted of nine days of prolonged street fighting, until the order to withdraw was given on 25 September.
More than 8,000 British soldiers were registered as killed, missing or captured in the offensive.
A memorial service at Arnhem Oosterbeek war cemetery will be held on Sunday and attended by Princess Anne, who will be representing King Charles.