Broken Pots, Mending Lives  
The Archaeology of Operation Nightingale
Published by Casemate
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781636242477
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ISBN: 9781636242477 Price: INR 844.99
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A fully illustrated insight into an innovative recovery program that supports wounded soldiers through involvement in archaeology.

For those that survive, the traumas of military conflict can be long-lasting. It might seem astonishing that archaeology, with its uncovering of the traces of the long-dead, of battlefields, of skeletal remains, could provide solace, and yet there is something magical about the subject. Operation Nightingale is a program set up in 2011 within the Ministry of Defence of the United Kingdom to help facilitate the recovery of armed forces personnel recently engaged in armed conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, using the archaeology of the British Training Areas. In the following decade, the project expanded to include veterans of older conflicts and of other nations – from the United States, from Poland, from Australia and elsewhere.

In archaeology there is a job for everyone: from surveying and drawing, to examining the finds, to digging itself. Often this is in some of the most beautiful and restful of landscapes and with talks around a campfire at the end of the day.

This book is the story of those veterans, of their incredible discoveries, of their own journeys of recovery – and sometimes into a lifetime of archaeology. From the crash sites of Spitfires and trenches of the Western Front in the First World War, through to burial grounds of convicts, camp sites of Hessian mercenaries, and Anglo-Saxon cemeteries. Lavishly illustrated, this work will show the reader how the discovery of our shared past – of long-forgotten houses, of glinting gold jewelry, of broken pots, can be restorative and help people mend otherwise damaged lives.
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Description
A fully illustrated insight into an innovative recovery program that supports wounded soldiers through involvement in archaeology.

For those that survive, the traumas of military conflict can be long-lasting. It might seem astonishing that archaeology, with its uncovering of the traces of the long-dead, of battlefields, of skeletal remains, could provide solace, and yet there is something magical about the subject. Operation Nightingale is a program set up in 2011 within the Ministry of Defence of the United Kingdom to help facilitate the recovery of armed forces personnel recently engaged in armed conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq, using the archaeology of the British Training Areas. In the following decade, the project expanded to include veterans of older conflicts and of other nations – from the United States, from Poland, from Australia and elsewhere.

In archaeology there is a job for everyone: from surveying and drawing, to examining the finds, to digging itself. Often this is in some of the most beautiful and restful of landscapes and with talks around a campfire at the end of the day.

This book is the story of those veterans, of their incredible discoveries, of their own journeys of recovery – and sometimes into a lifetime of archaeology. From the crash sites of Spitfires and trenches of the Western Front in the First World War, through to burial grounds of convicts, camp sites of Hessian mercenaries, and Anglo-Saxon cemeteries. Lavishly illustrated, this work will show the reader how the discovery of our shared past – of long-forgotten houses, of glinting gold jewelry, of broken pots, can be restorative and help people mend otherwise damaged lives.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Foreword, by Alice Roberts
  • The cast
  • Maps
  • Introduction
  • 1. Origins at the midden: the beginnings of Operation Nightingale at an Iron Age feasting site
  • 2. The Phoenix and the Eagle: searching for Hessians and the Band of Brothers
  • 3. Legends: the convict burials of Rat Island
  • 4. Mud, blood and green fields beyond: digging for Tank 796 and the traces of the First World War
  • 5. Tally Ho!: archaeology and the Battle of Britain
  • 6. Facing Beowulf: excavating remains of Anglo-Saxon England
  • 7. Locking the house: finding and reconstructing a Bronze Age roundhouse
  • 8. Homes of the dead: discoveries at a burial mound on Salisbury Plain
  • 9. Conclusions
  • The sites and further reading
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