Manila Bulletin

The two-century-old mystery of Waterloo’s skeletal remains

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LIEGE, Belgium (AFP) – More than 200 years after Napoleon met defeat at Waterloo, the bones of soldiers killed on that famous battlefiel­d continue to intrigue Belgian researcher­s and experts, who use them to peer back to that moment in history.

"So many bones – it's really unique!" exclaimed one such historian, Bernard Wilkin, as he stood in front of a forensic pathologis­t's table holding two skulls, three femurs and hip bones.

He was in an autopsy room in the Forensic Medicine Institute in Liege, eastern Belgium, where tests are being carried out on the skeletal remains to determine from which regions the four soldiers they belong to came from. That in itself is a challenge.

Half a dozen European nationalit­ies were represente­d in the military ranks at the Battle of Waterloo, located 20 kilometers (12 miles) south of Brussels.

That armed clash of June 18, 1815 ended Napoleon Bonaparte's ambitions of conquering Europe to build a great empire, and resulted in the deaths of around 20,000 soldiers.

The battle has since been pored over by historians, and – with advances in the genetic, medical and scanning fields – researcher­s can now piece together pages of the past from the remains buried in the ground.

Some of those remains have been recovered through archeologi­cal digs, such as one last year that allowed the reconstitu­tion of a skeleton found not far from a field hospital the British Duke of Wellington had set up.

But the remains examined by Wilkin surfaced through another route.

‘Prussians in my attic’

The historian, who works for the Belgian government's historical archives, said he gave a conference late last year and "this middle-aged man came to see afterwards and told me, 'Mr Wilkin, I have some Prussians in my attic'."

Wilkin, smiling, said the man "showed me photos on his phone and told me someone had given him these bones so he can put them on exhibit... which he refused to do on ethical grounds."

The remains stayed hidden away until the man met Wilkin, who he believed could analyze them and give them a decent resting place.

A key item of interest in the collection is a right foot with nearly all its toes – that of a "Prussian soldier" according to the middle-aged man.

"To see a foot so well preserved is pretty rare, because usually the small bones on the extremitie­s disappear into the ground," noted Mathilde Daumas, an anthropolo­gist at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles who is part of the research work.

As for the attributed "Prussian" provenance, the experts are cautious.

The place it was discovered was the village of Plancenoit, where troops on the Prussian and Napoleonic sides bitterly fought, Wilkin said, holding out the possibilit­y the remains might be those of French soldiers.

Scraps of boots and metal buckles found among the remains do point to uniforms worn by soldiers from the Germanic side arrayed against the French.

But "we know that soldiers stripped the dead for their own gear," the historian said.

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