The dawn service has become an integral part of Anzac Day in Australia, with tens of thousands of people – service personnel and civilians alike – attending services across the country in a spirit of remembrance and reflection. A typical dawn service includes a commemorative address, laying of wreaths, playing of military bugle calls, and a one or two minute period of silence. Some services also include the mounting of a catafalque party, an armed guard of four personnel which attends to a catafalque (traditionally a platform containing a coffin, but it may be represented by a shrine). The traditional bugle calls are ‘Last Post’ and ‘Reveille’, which are played before and after the period of silence respectively.
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