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21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-10 06:03pm
by Techno_Union
9:47AM GMT 10 Feb 2012

The men were part of a larger group of 34 who were buried alive when an Allied shell exploded above the tunnel in 1918 causing it to cave in.
Thirteen bodies were recovered from the underground shelter but the remaining men had to be left under a mountain of mud as it was too dangerous to retrieve them.
Nearly a century later French archaeologists stumbled upon the mass grave on the former Western Front during excavation work for a road building project.
Many of the skeletal remains were found in the same positions the men had been in at the time of the collapse, prompting experts to liken the scene to Pompeii.
A number of the soldiers were discovered sitting upright on a bench, one was lying in his bed and another was in the foetal position having been thrown down a flight of stairs.

As well as the bodies, poignant personal effects such as boots, helmets, weapons, wine bottles, spectacles, wallets, pipes, cigarette cases and pocket books were also found.
Even the skeleton of a goat was found, assumed to be a source of fresh milk for the soldiers.
Archaeologists believe the items were so well preserved because hardly any air, water or lights had penetrated the trench.
The 300ft long tunnel was located 18ft beneath the surface near the small town of Carspach in the Alsace region in France.
Michael Landolt, the archaeologist leading the dig, said: "It's a bit like Pompeii.
"Everything collapsed in seconds and is just the way it was at the time.
"Here, as in Pompeii, we found the bodies as they were at the moment of their death.
"Some of the men were found in sitting positions on a bench, others lying down. One was projected down a flight of wooden stairs and was found in a foetal position.
"The collapsed shelter was filled with soil. The items were very well preserved because of the absence of air and light and water.
"Metal objects were rusty, wood was in good condition and we found some pages of newspapers that were still readable.
"Leather was in good condition as well, still supple.
"The items will be taken to a laboratory, cleaned and examined."
Archaeologists also uncovered the wooden sides, floors and stairways of the shelter that
The dead soldiers were part of the 6th Company, 94th Reserve Infantry Regiment.
Their names are all known. They include Musketeer Martin Heidrich, 20, Private Harry Bierkamp, 22, and Lieutenant August Hutten, 37.
Their names are inscribed on a memorial in the nearby German war cemetery of Illfurth.
The bodies have been handed over to the German War Graves Commission but unless relatives can be found and they request the remains to be repatriated, it is planned that the men will be buried at Illfurth.
The underground tunnel was big enough to shelter 500 men and had 16 exits.
It would have been equipped with heating, telephone connections, electricity, beds and a pipe to pump out water.
The French attacked the shelter on March 18, 1918 with aerial mines that penetrated the ground and blasted in the side wall of the shelter in two points.
It is estimated that over 165,000 Commonwealth soldiers are still unaccounted for on the Western Front.
Link here. (Apologies for the article formatting)

The photos are amazing. Would love to explore what's left of the structure.

Re: 21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-10 07:20pm
by Zor
As cool as a find that is, sooting around those areas is kinda risky. Alot of unexploded munitions are still around and they can explode.

I am a bit suprised at how good the material was perserved.

Zor

Re: 21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-19 05:46am
by DrMckay
It sounds like one hell of a find, a literal slice of life from 1918, a minute captured forever. I hope that the archaeologists will have all the time they need to excavate the area and document the site, as finds such as this discovered during the construction of public works usually have a limited window in which they can be excavated before construction resumes. It would be a tragedy if the process was cut short.

On another topic, how often does this sort of thing happen in Europe? It's been a battleground for hundreds of years, and the sheer archaeological wealth of any random 100 feet of ground has got to be pretty damn significant in terms of material culture. And I'm always reading about farmers stumbling across old shells, bodies and other detritus.

Re: 21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-19 08:32am
by Thanas
DrMckay wrote:On another topic, how often does this sort of thing happen in Europe? It's been a battleground for hundreds of years, and the sheer archaeological wealth of any random 100 feet of ground has got to be pretty damn significant in terms of material culture. And I'm always reading about farmers stumbling across old shells, bodies and other detritus.
Very often but thanks to some stupid laws most of the stuff in some nations like Germany goes unreported and becomes lost forever.

Re: 21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-19 10:29pm
by Questor
Thanas wrote:
DrMckay wrote:On another topic, how often does this sort of thing happen in Europe? It's been a battleground for hundreds of years, and the sheer archaeological wealth of any random 100 feet of ground has got to be pretty damn significant in terms of material culture. And I'm always reading about farmers stumbling across old shells, bodies and other detritus.
Very often but thanks to some stupid laws most of the stuff in some nations like Germany goes unreported and becomes lost forever.
Are any of the battlefields preserved?

Is there any reason for the laws, or are they the kind of stuff that is more "we're too lazy to protect this, so we won't?"

Re: 21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-19 11:08pm
by Sea Skimmer
Verdun and a few other places have areas which were preserved, in that nobody ever deliberately filled in the trenches and shell holes, and some trenches are still kept revetted though not to the depths they would have had in the war. After WW1 the landscape was literally ruined, most plant life could not grow because of levels of TNT contamination of the soil high enough to cause injury to humans. It took lots and lots work to identify trees and other plants species that could survive and reestablish the top soil, while rain and human effort progressively filled in the moonscape. This is what France and Belgium spent lots of the war reparations on. The end result is though that areas that didn’t return to farmland are now mostly forested. WW2 stuff is being actively destroyed in Germany while France and Belgium seem to have a policy of leaving the pillboxes of WW1 intact including one used by Hitler.

Re: 21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-20 01:26pm
by Thanas
Questor wrote:Is there any reason for the laws, or are they the kind of stuff that is more "we're too lazy to protect this, so we won't?"
The reason for the laws is history. Historically, all things that are in the ground belong to the state. With the end result that if you find something interesting on your property, the state will just take it. So most people do not report things because they do not want the state to camp on their property for theoretically years or even decades, with them not getting anything out of the bargain except the market value of their property and maybe not even that.

Re: 21 Preserved German Soldiers Found in WWI Shelter

Posted: 2012-02-21 01:58am
by FSTargetDrone
Sea Skimmer wrote:WW2 stuff is being actively destroyed in Germany
Sorry, can you elaborate a bit?