https://www.gla.ac.uk/news/headline_854908_en.html
* Skip to main content
[ ]
[go]
* University news
* Archive of news
* University events
* Study
* Research
* Explore
* Connect
[ ]
[go]
University of Glasgow logo small University of Glasgow logo
* Home
* University news
University news
* University news
* Archive of news
* University events
New study suggests mystery still surrounds what happened to the
bodies of Waterloo militaries
Battle of Waterloo 1815
Were the bones of fallen Battle of Waterloo soldiers sold as
fertiliser?
Thousands of soldiers died on the Belgium battlefield yet very few
human remains have been found.
Now a new study by the University of Glasgow's Professor Tony Pollard
suggests it is the most probable outcome of such a bloodied affair,
but the archaeologist says it isn't quite a situation of 'case
closed'.
In his findings published today - exactly 207 years since the
historic conflict - in the peer-reviewed Journal of Conflict
Archaeology, lead expert Professor Pollard, the Director of the
Centre for Battlefield Archaeology at the University of Glasgow,
demonstrates original data comprising of newly found battlefield
descriptions and drawings, made by people who visited in the days and
weeks following Napoleon's defeat.
These included letters and personal memoirs from a Scottish merchant
living in Brussels at the time of the battle, James Ker, who visited
in the days following the battle and describes men dying in his arms.
Together the visitor accounts describe the exact locations of three
mass graves containing up to 13,000 bodies. But will these new data
lead to a mass grave discovery of the long-lost bones of those who
gave their lives in this battle, which finally concluded a 23-year
long war?
Professor Pollard, said that this is unlikely adding: "Artistic
licence and hyperbole over the number of bodies in mass graves
notwithstanding, the bodies of the dead were clearly disposed of at
numerous locations across the battlefield, so it is somewhat
surprising that there is no reliable record of a mass grave ever
being encountered.
"At least three newspaper articles from the 1820s onwards reference
the importing of human bones from European battlefields for the
purpose of producing fertiliser.
"European battlefields may have provided a convenient source of bone
that could be ground down into bone-meal, an effective form of
fertiliser. One of the main markets for this raw material was the
British Isles."
Waterloo Uncovered Portrait - Professor Tony Pollard Credit Chris Van
Houts
Professor Pollard, who is based at the University's Scottish Centre
for War Studies and Conflict Archaeology, said: "Waterloo attracted
visitors almost as soon as the gun smoke cleared.
"Many came to steal the belongings of the dead, some even stole teeth
to make into dentures, while others came to simply observe what had
happened. It's likely that an agent of a purveyor of bones would
arrive at the battlefield with high expectations of securing their
prize. Primary targets would be mass graves, as they would have
enough bodies in them to merit the effort of digging the bones.
"Local people would have been able to point these agents to the
locations of the mass graves, as many of them would have vivid
memories of the burials taking place, or may even have helped with
the digging.
Professor Pollard added: "It's also possible that the various
guidebooks and travelogues that described the nature and location of
the graves could have served essentially as treasure maps complete
with an X to mark the spot.
"On the basis of these accounts, backed up by the well attested
importance of bone meal in the practice of agriculture, the emptying
of mass graves at Waterloo in order to obtain bones seems feasible,
and the likely conclusion is that."
But, to determine once and for all, as part of his role as the Lead
Academic and an Archaeological Director at the charity Waterloo
Uncovered, Professor Pollard will help to lead an "ambitious",
several years-long geophysical survey, involving veterans who will
join the dig to provide insight to world-class archaeologists. In
turn they receive care and recovery.
Professor Pollard added: "The next stage is to head back out to
Waterloo, to attempt to plot grave sites resulting from the analysis
of early visitor accounts reported here.
"If human remains have been removed on the scale proposed then there
should be, at least in some cases, archaeological evidence of the
pits from which they were taken, however truncated and poorly defined
these might be.
"Covering large areas of the battlefield over the coming years, we
will look to identify areas of previous ground disturbance to test
the results of the source review and distribution map, and in
conjunction with further documentary research and some excavation
will provide a much more definitive picture of the fate of the dead
of Waterloo."
If the team was to find anything, it would be an extremely rare
discovery. In 2015 a human skeleton was uncovered during the building
of a new museum and car park at the site.
Then in 2019, amputated human leg bones were unearthed by the
Waterloo Uncovered team in an excavation of the main allied field
hospital. There is also a skeleton of uncertain provenance in the
museum in Waterloo. No other significant remains have ever been
found.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The article is freely available here - "These spots of excavation
tell: using early visitor accounts to map the missing graves of
Waterloo"
Waterloo Uncovered
Waterloo Uncovered is an archaeology project involving military
veterans and serving personnel who have been injured or are suffering
from PTSD.
Working in partnership with some of Europe's top universities, and
through the unique perspective of a team comprised of archaeologists,
veterans, and serving soldiers, Waterloo Uncovered aims to understand
war and its impact on people - and to educate the public about it
First published: 18 June 2022
<< University news
<< previous story
in this issue
next story >>
Related Links
* Professor Tony Pollard - research profile
* The Centre for Battlefield Archaeology
* Scottish Centre for War Studies and Conflict Archaeology
* School of Humanities | Sgoil nan Daonnachdan
* College of Arts
* The Journal of Conflict Archaeology - website
* Full paper - These spots of excavation tell: using early visitor
accounts to map the missing graves of Waterloo paper
Back to the top
STUDY
* Subjects A-Z
* Undergraduate
* Postgraduate
* Online study
* Short courses
* International students
* Student life
* Scholarships and funding
* Visit us / Open Days
RESEARCH
* Research units A-Z
* Research opportunities A-Z
* Glasgow Research Beacons
* Research strategy & policies
* Research excellence
* Our research environment
EXPLORE
* Meet World Changing Glasgow
* City of Glasgow
* Visit us
* Accessibility
* Maps and travel
* Facts & figures
* News
* Events
* Schools
* Research Institutes
* Colleges
* Services
* Library
CONNECT
* Staff A-Z
* Information for our alumni
* Support us
* Business & innovation
* Community and public engagement
* Social Media listings
* Ask a student
JOBS AT GLASGOW
* Current vacancies
University of Glasgow
* Facebook
* Twitter
* Instagram
* YouTube
The University of Glasgow is a registered Scottish charity:
Registration Number SC004401
University news
* Contact us
Legal
* Accessibility statement
* Freedom of information
* FOI publication scheme
* Modern Slavery Statement
* Privacy and cookies
* Terms of use
Current students
* MyGlasgow Students
Staff
* MyGlasgow Staff
The Times and Sunday Times Scottish University of the Year 2022
The University of Glasgow uses cookies for analytics and advertising.
Find out more about our Privacy policy. settings icon privacy
settings close
We use cookies
Necessary cookies
Necessary cookies enable core functionality. The website cannot
function properly without these cookies, and can only be disabled by
changing your browser preferences.
Analytics cookies
Analytical cookies help us improve our website. We use Google
Analytics. All data is anonymised.
Switch analytics [ ]
ON OFF
Hotjar
Hotjar helps us to understand and improve our users' behaviour by
visually representing their clicks, taps and scrolling. All data is
anonymised.
Switch hotjar [ ]
ON OFF
Marketing cookies
Marketing cookies are used to ensure our marketing content is
relevant, timely and interest based. They allow our approved partner
to measure effectiveness and serve appropriate and personalised
marketing messages on other websites based on your activity on
glasgow.ac.uk
Switch marketing cookies [ ]
ON OFF
Privacy policy
close