Editorial

IF 0.5 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Journal of Conflict Archaeology Pub Date : 2017-01-02 DOI:10.1080/15740773.2017.1429239
I. Banks, T. Pollard
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Abstract

The papers in this first issue of the 12th volume of this journal are all on topics associated with the Second World War. The first paper (by Seitsonen, Herva, Nordqvist, and Herva) is a report on the excavation of a Prisoner of War work camp in Arctic Finland, the first German camp in Finland to be excavated. The Arctic north is a very different environment to that of most of Europe, and accordingly the camps demonstrate features uncommon to other German prisoner of war camps. The paper goes beyond a mere excavation report to show some of the real potential of Conflict Archaeology by tracing the lines of distribution into the camp of material from across Europe. It is a tremendous piece of research that both demonstrates what can be done with Conflict Archaeology, and the research potential of prisoner of war camps. It is also a welcome paper on the less martial aspects of Conflict Archaeology, looking at the archaeology beyond the battlefield. The second paper (by Marter, Visser, Alders, Röder, Gottwald, Mank, Hubbard and Recker) is an account of the excavation of a Halifax bomber shot down in March 1944 over Germany. Most aircraft excavations to date have been carried out by enthusiasts, with variable quality of recording and commitment to understanding the details of the crash. This excavation combined metal detector survey with traditional archaeological excavation techniques to provide information that was sufficient to allow reconstruction of the shooting down and crashing of the aircraft. The paper is a useful contribution to the developing sub-discipline of aviation archaeology as it shows just how much material can be recovered through careful excavation, and underlines that aircraft wrecks from the twentieth century should not be abandoned to trophy hunters, but should be treated as any other aspect of the historic environment. The final paper in the issue (by Dave Passmore, David Capps-Tunwell, Martijn Reinders and Stephan Harrison) is another aspect of the archaeology of the Second World War behind the frontline. The research looks at the fuel dumps and ammo stores of north-west Europe, providing a very useful typology of such sites that can be used across Western Europe. The team responsible for this research has provided a series of papers over the past few years both in this journal and in others on the ephemeral Second World War remains still surviving in forested environments, and this contribution adds to that corpus of material that is now available for the long-term benefit of other researchers. This final paper works particularly well with the first paper, as both look at the material which was a part of the daily lived experience of soldiers and PoWs during the Second World War. Both papers resulted from projects dealing with the traces of the Second World War that survive in woodlands and on marginal ground that have remained largely untouched since the war. Whereas the towns and fields of Europe have lost many of the traces of war, the ‘marginal’ areas away from the core of modern life still preserve the abandoned material of soldiers’ lives. In this sense, there is a connection with the second paper, where the fieldwork recovered a range of personal items from the flight crew, despite their bodies having been recovered decades previously. All three papers, then, deal with the ephemera of warfare, the material that people used every day, the sites that were part of the background of warfare. Conflict Archaeology at its best is all about taking these ephemeral traces of war and teasing out the details of life and death in a way that only comes through an holistic approach that uses all available forms of evidence available. Conflict Archaeology is an example of the strengths of
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这本杂志第12卷第1期的论文都是关于第二次世界大战的主题。第一篇论文(由Seitsonen、Herva、Nordqvist和Herva撰写)是关于在芬兰北极地区挖掘战俘工作营地的报告,这是芬兰第一个被挖掘的德国营地。北极北部的环境与欧洲大部分地区截然不同,因此,这些营地展现出了其他德国战俘营所不具备的特色。这篇论文不仅仅是一份挖掘报告,而是通过追踪欧洲各地材料的分布线,展示了冲突考古的一些真正潜力。这是一项巨大的研究,既展示了冲突考古可以做些什么,也展示了战俘营的研究潜力。这也是一篇受欢迎的关于冲突考古中不那么军事化的方面的论文,着眼于战场之外的考古。第二篇论文(由Marter、Visser、Alders、Röder、Gottwald、Mank、Hubbard和Recker撰写)描述了1944年3月在德国上空击落的哈利法克斯轰炸机的挖掘情况。迄今为止,大多数飞机挖掘都是由爱好者进行的,记录质量参差不齐,并致力于了解坠机细节。这次挖掘将金属探测器调查与传统考古挖掘技术相结合,提供了足以重建飞机被击落和坠毁的信息。这篇论文对航空考古子学科的发展做出了有益的贡献,因为它展示了通过仔细挖掘可以回收多少材料,并强调二十世纪的飞机残骸不应被遗弃给战利品猎人,而应被视为历史环境的任何其他方面。本期的最后一篇论文(由Dave Passmore、David Capps Tunwell、Martijn Reinders和Stephan Harrison撰写)是第二次世界大战前线考古的另一个方面。这项研究着眼于欧洲西北部的燃料堆和弹药库,为这些地点提供了一种非常有用的类型,可以在整个西欧使用。在过去的几年里,负责这项研究的团队在本杂志和其他杂志上发表了一系列关于短暂的第二次世界大战仍然在森林环境中生存的论文,这一贡献为其他研究人员的长期利益增加了素材库。最后一篇论文与第一篇论文的效果特别好,因为这两篇论文都着眼于第二次世界大战期间士兵和战俘日常生活经历的一部分。这两篇论文都是关于第二次世界大战痕迹的项目的成果,这些痕迹存在于林地和边缘地带,自战争以来基本上没有受到影响。尽管欧洲的城镇和田野已经失去了许多战争的痕迹,但远离现代生活核心的“边缘”地区仍然保留着士兵生活中被遗弃的物质。从这个意义上说,这与第二篇论文有关,在该论文中,尽管机组人员的尸体在几十年前就被找到了,但实地调查从机组人员那里找到了一系列个人物品。因此,这三篇论文都涉及战争的短暂性,人们每天使用的材料,战争背景的一部分。冲突考古在最好的情况下,就是要捕捉这些短暂的战争痕迹,并以一种只有通过使用所有可用形式的证据的整体方法才能发现生与死的细节。冲突考古是
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
50.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Conflict Archaeology is an English-language journal devoted to the battlefield and military archaeology and other spheres of conflict archaeology, covering all periods with a worldwide scope. Additional spheres of interest will include the archaeology of industrial and popular protest; contested landscapes and monuments; nationalism and colonialism; class conflict; the origins of conflict; forensic applications in war-zones; and human rights cases. Themed issues will carry papers on current research; subject and period overviews; fieldwork and excavation reports-interim and final reports; artifact studies; scientific applications; technique evaluations; conference summaries; and book reviews.
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