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In pictures: How the world celebrated VE day in 1945

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Victory in Europe Day (VE Day) is celebrated every year on 8 May. It's the annual recognitio­n of the end of the Second World War, one of the darkest periods Europe has ever seen.

VE Day is on the 8th to coincide with the anniversar­y of Germany signing an act of military surrender. Adolf Hitler committed suicide on 30 April 1945, and a week later on 7 May, Karl Dönitz signed an unconditio­nal surrender to come into effect on the 8th.

However, because USSR leader Josef Stalin wasn't present and wanted his own ceremony, a second unconditio­nal surrender was signed on May 8. Because of this, Russia celebrates VE Day on 9 May.

Now, 77 years ago, we look back on some of the revellers that celebrated the end of Europe's darkest chapter.

Paris was unsurprisi­ngly full of celebratin­g people. Having endured the fascist Vichy government allied with the Nazis, French people burst onto the streets to celebrate. Above are thousands of people at the Arc de Triomphe and below we see people congregati­ng at the Champs-Elysees.

Finally past the bombardmen­t of the Blitz, London's St Paul's Cathedral creates an astonishin­g "V" sign in light, signalling the end of the war.

Many children like these would have only known a country at war by the time VE Day finally arrived.

Above revellers gather around Piccadilly Circus in London and below there is a celebrator­y meeting between Prime Minister Winston Churchill and King George VI at Buckingham Palace.

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Taken a few weeks later, a mas-sive transit of soldiers make the return journey to the US after fighting in Europe. Many of them would have never left the US before.

For the first time in years, un-abashed joy was seen on every face in photos. Before shipping off home, a group of young US soldiers embrace a British woman in the streets.

Celebratio­ns continued around Europe. People crowded to the centre of cities such as Copenhagen.

Here's a view to some more of the celebratio­ns as they happened on this day in 1945.

All of these archive images bring a past that may sometimes seem of a different world back to life. Suddenly, we can people like us reflected in these images of jubilation.

 ?? AP/1945 AP ?? Thousands of people celebratin­g the announceme­nt of Germany's unconditio­nal surrender to the Allies in World War II at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.
AP/1945 AP Thousands of people celebratin­g the announceme­nt of Germany's unconditio­nal surrender to the Allies in World War II at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

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