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Mass Grave Sheds Light on Europe's Bloody History

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Thor, God of Thunder
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« on: August 04, 2007, 04:14:43 am »

Mass Grave Sheds Light on Europe's Bloody History
By David Crossland in Berlin

Europe's soil is blood-soaked from centuries of fighting but rarely yields mass graves from battles that took place before the two world wars. One such grave has now been found near Berlin with over 100 soldiers who died in the 1636 Battle of Wittstock. Archaeologists say they can learn much from the skeletons which show terrible wounds.




 DPA
An archaeologist gently uncovering a row of skeletons in the mass grave found in Wittstock near Berlin.

Archaeologists in Germany are examining a mass grave containing the skeletons of more than 100 soldiers who fell in a major battle during the Thirty Years War.

Workers came across the graves by chance while digging in a sand pit near the town of Wittstock, northwest of Berlin, in June.

"The special thing about this find is that there are only very few mass graves in Europe between 1300 and 1850 that can be attributed to specific battles," Anja Grothe, the archaeologist leading the excavation, told SPIEGEL ONLINE.

Historians and archaeologists called to examine the neat rows of skeletons quickly concluded that they were men who died in the Battle of Wittstock on October 4, 1636, when a Protestant army of 16,000 Swedes beat a force of 22,000 from the Catholic alliance of the Holy Roman empire and Saxony. Some 6,000 men died in the fighting.

Archaeologists are now excavating the site and have started to examine the skeletons, many of which show the dreadful battlefield wounds that killed them -- bones smashed by heavy blades, skulls torn open by musket balls.

The rarity of such graves may seem astonishing given the hundreds of battles that shaped Europe's blood-drenched history. But the battlefields often stretched over a number of square miles, and the dead tended to be buried individually where they fell.

"They were stripped of clothing and weapons and anything else usable and usually just buried on the spot," said Grothe. "People didn't want to cart the corpses from one place to another."

Only Four Other Mass Graves

She said that apart from the find in Wittstock, only four other mass graves in Europe that were associated with specific battles had been discovered:

* on the Baltic island of Gotland, dating from a 1361 battle between Sweden and Denmark

* in the northern English village of Towton. A grave containing 43 soldiers was discovered underneath Towton Hall in 1996. They are believed to have died in the Battle of Towton in 1461 during the English Wars of the Roses

* a grave in northern Germany linked to the Battle of Hemmingstedt in 1500 when peasants defeated an army of knights

* in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, where the remains of 2,000 soldiers from Napoleon's Grand Army were found in 2002. They died during Napoleon's disastrous retreat from Moscow. Many of the skeletons were found curled up and undamaged, suggesting they were killed by cold, not cannonballs or bullets.

Grothe, who works for the state of Brandenburg's Office for Monument Protection, said the Wittstock bodies would be taken away and forensically examined.

Examining the Strains of a Soldier's Life

Her team of five specialists are carefully sifting through the pit with plastic spades, spoons, brushes and vaccum cleaners. The investigation will shed light not only on the battle itself but on life at the time, said Grothe.

"We can get exciting insights into the lives of the soldiers," she said. "For example we can find out things about the men's general health from their tooth decay. At least three bodies show signs of syphilis. And we can check the bones for disease and examine the impact on the bodies of the strains of the soldiers' life - carrying heavy weapons, shoving cannon, hauling baggage trains."

Most of the corpses had been stripped before they were buried and only evidence of their undergarments remains in the form of metal hooks and loops, she said. "Everything that was usable in any way was taken off them -- shoes, weapons, upper clothing."

The archaeologists will try to establish the men's origins. Soldiers from from several nations fought at Wittstock, including German states, Scots and Swedes.

Grothe said the grave contains around 130. Most of the men were aged 20 to 35 when they died. The bodies are piled above each other in neat rows.

She said it was unclear what will happen to the corpses once the examinations have been completed. "It will take a while and we'll need extra funding," she said.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0%2C1518%2C497461%2C00.html

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Thor, God of Thunder
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« Reply #1 on: August 04, 2007, 04:41:01 am »

400-year-old Scots ready to reveal their battle secrets
ALLAN HALL
 IN BERLIN


A MASS grave of soldiers, including Scots, slaughtered during Europe's bloody Thirty Years War is yielding up valuable information on how they had lived.

Skeletons of more than 100 men who fought in the Battle of Wittstock near Berlin in 1636 were discovered by workmen excavating a sandpit.

Anthropologists say the remains offer a fascinating insight into the health of Europeans nearly 400 years ago.

Superficially, the bodies bear all the hallmarks of terrible fighting: shoulder blades smashed by axes; spines run through with swords and skulls pierced by musket balls.

They died in the Battle of Wittstock on 4 October, 1636, when a Protestant army of 16,000 Swedes beat a force of 22,000 from the Catholic alliance of the Holy Roman Empire and Saxony. Some 6,000 men died in the fighting.

Soldiers from several nations fought at Wittstock, including hundreds from Scotland, the German states and Swedes. Sweden was then a magnet for Scottish noblemen, who became civil servants and formed the backbone of the army's officer corps. James King, born on Warbester Hoy in the Orkney Islands, commanded the entire left wing of the Swedish army at the battle.

Franz Schopper, the director of the Brandenburg Monument Preservation Office, said: "We believe there are bodies in there from Scotland, Sweden and the Danube basin, from initial dental examinations."

The rarity of such graves seems astonishing, given the hundreds of battles that shaped Europe's blood-drenched history. But this is one of only four mass, battle graves from more than 200 years ago that have been discovered.

Five specialists are sifting through the pit. Antje Grothe, the archaeologist in charge of the exhumations, said: "We can get exciting insights into the lives of the soldiers.

"For example, we can find out things about the men's general health from their tooth decay. At least three bodies show signs of syphilis. And we can check the bones for disease and examine the impact on the bodies of the strains of the soldiers' life: carrying heavy weapons; shoving cannon; hauling baggage trains."

Most of the corpses were stripped before being buried and the only evidence of their undergarments remains in the form of metal hooks and loops, she said. "Everything that was usable in any way was taken off them - shoes, weapons, upper clothing." The archaeologists are hopeful that coins and other small personal effects may be found in the soil.

Some metal fragments not identifiable with Swedish or Prussian garb leads the archaeologists to think that some of the soldiers were foreigners. The remains are of men aged between 20 and 40.

Some 40,000 individuals took part in the battle and experts reckon the remains of 7,000 are scattered around.

In the long term, DNA analysis may be carried out on some remains.

This article: http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1201232007

Last updated: 01-Aug-07 00:17 BST


http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1201232007
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