Poppies are everywhere this week as people all over the UK remember the sacrifice of soldiers in conflicts past and present.

It’s a day of national commemoration, culminating in two minutes’ silence on Remembrance Sunday, when communities gather around war memorials to honour the war dead. There’s now a rich cultural tradition of acts and symbols that have come to be central to our act of Remembrance.

* In the UK, we observe two minutes’ silence on both on Armistice Day - the actual anniversary of the end of World War I in 1918 - and on the second Sunday of November, called Remembrance Sunday.

* The famous poem In Flanders Fields refers to the red poppies that bloomed over soldiers’ graves in World War I and led to the poppy being adopted as the emblem of Remembrance Day.

* Poppies are made at The Poppy Factory in Richmond, London, by war veterans. It has offered paid employment to wounded, sick or injured ex-servicemen and women since it was founded in 1922.

* The Army Benevolent Fund is the official British Army charity – now known as ABF The Soldiers’ Charity. It supports both veterans and their families affected by conflicts since the First World War.

* The main national Remembrance celebration is held in London. The Royal Family, dignitaries and representatives of the armed forces and civilian uniformed services parade and congregate at The Cenotaph in Whitehall.

* The Festival of Remembrance at The Royal Albert Hall takes place on the Saturday before Remembrance Sunday. This musical event dates back to the 1920s and originally featured John Foulds’ World Requiem.

* The Requiem is music originally used in church services for the repose of the souls of the dead. It often includes a setting of Pie Jesu. There are many beautiful Requiems by composers from Mozart to Andrew Lloyd-Webber to Bob Chilcott.

* The English poet Laurence Binyon wrote For the Fallen in 1914. Its famous words are synonymous with Remembrance Day: “They shall grow not old as we that are left grow old… at the going down of the sun and in the morning we will remember them.”

* Composer and former Royal Artillery Major Douglas Guest set For the Fallen to music. This beautiful, short piece is now a well-known feature of choral remembrance services.

* Remembrance Day is commemorated all over the Commonwealth and beyond. In the USA, 11th November is designated Veterans’ Day. Americans also mark Memorial Day in May.

ABF The Soldiers’ Charity and Tamesis Chamber Choir have released an album of classical, choral Remembrance music, including Chilcott’s Requiem and Guest’s For the Fallen. All profits from the £10 price go to the charity, benefiting army veterans and their families. To buy it, go to http://cd.tames.is, search on iTunes or phone 0118 934 3200. To find out about the charity’s work, visit http://www.soldierscharity.org .