Western Daily Press

Veterans unveil recreation of Bronze Age roundhouse

- BEN MITCHELL news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

ATRADITION­AL Bronze Age roundhouse reconstruc­ted by a group of military veterans as part of an experiment­al project has been unveiled.

TV presenter and archaeolog­ist Professor Alice Roberts attended Butser Ancient Farm, near Chalton, Hampshire, for the completion of the replica which has taken 1,000 hours of work to build.

The 25 volunteers who worked on the project were recruited through Operation Nightingal­e to recreate the building which was excavated last year at Dunch Hill, near Tidworth, Wiltshire.

The Ministry of Defence launched Operation Nightingal­e 10 years ago with the aim of assisting the recovery of wounded, injured and sick military personnel and veterans by involving them in archaeolog­ical investigat­ions.

As well as experiment­ing with different building techniques to establish the most likely method used for the original earth-walled constructi­on 3,000 years ago, the veterans have also been learning about aspects of Bronze

Age life from making pottery to spears.

Navy veteran John William Bennett, from Havant, Hampshire, said: “To start with I was both excited and apprehensi­ve about the project – apprehensi­ve because I was fearful of how I would react to it, as socialisin­g was a big trigger for my functional neurologic­al disorder affecting my mobility and motor control.

“However, I need not have worried, I haven’t been triggered and my confidence has really grown.

“Working through each stage of the project has been brilliant and I still find it hard to believe how much my life has turned around because of it.”

Experiment­al archaeolog­ist Trevor Creighton, from Butser Ancient Farm, said: “My colleagues and the Operation Nightingal­e team have formed a brilliant collaborat­ive network and we are creating a building that helps us better understand prehistori­c architectu­re. In the coming years it will provide even more insights into structures that no-one has seen for 3,000 years.

“But more than that, it is a way that we can give back something to people who have served their country in often harrowing situations.”

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 ?? Pictures: Andrew Matthews ?? > Veteran Jesse Swanson, left, joins Butser Ancient Farm’s Will Scanlan as they thatch the roof. Below, veteran Kevin Reilly from Southsea applies daub to some wattle
Pictures: Andrew Matthews > Veteran Jesse Swanson, left, joins Butser Ancient Farm’s Will Scanlan as they thatch the roof. Below, veteran Kevin Reilly from Southsea applies daub to some wattle
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