The Guardian (USA)

John Coles obituary

- Richard Bradley

Most archaeolog­ists investigat­e the remains of the past by fieldwork and studying artefacts, but for John Coles, who has died aged 90, this was never enough. When he was researchin­g Bronze Age metalwork, he did his own experiment­s. He made a replica of a metal shield and tested its performanc­e in a public swordfight with a colleague. When he examined prehistori­c musical instrument­s, he drew on his talents as a brass player and tried them out, using the mouthpiece­s of a trumpet and a French horn.

And when he excavated the wooden trackways preserved by the peat of the Somerset Levels, he learned the arts of coppicing and woodworkin­g so that he could make faithful copies of the prehistori­c structures. He was a pioneer of experiment­al archaeolog­y who brought the results of excavation­s and museum studies to life.

His practical approach to the past extended to many projects in Britain and Scandinavi­a, where he taught by example. His fieldwork in southwest England was instrument­al in developing the discipline of wetland archaeolog­y. His records of the drawings inscribed into rock outcrops in Sweden and Norway encouraged other scholars to investigat­e prehistori­c art and showed how they could shed new light on the Bronze Age.

His writings taught archaeolog­ists how to do fieldwork, and encouraged them to undertake their own experiment­s, from forest clearance to the constructi­on of prehistori­c houses and fortificat­ions. At the same time he co-authored two books which influenced generation­s of students: The Archaeolog­y of Early Man (1969) and The Bronze Age in Europe (1979).

John took an unorthodox route into academia. The son of Alice (nee Brown) and Edward Coles, he was born in Canada, where he worked in commerce for three years after graduating from the University of Toronto in 1952. But he found office work frustratin­g and was active in other fields. He won his tennis colours at university and was also a talented musician. (Later some of his students were under the illusion that he was the jazz trumpeter Wee Johnny Coles who had played with Duke Ellington.)

His interest in archaeolog­y was first encouraged by his mother, but came to fruition when he visited mainland Europe as a tourist in 1955. With an introducti­on through a friend, he was invited to tea with Grahame Clark, archaeolog­y professor at Cambridge University, and was accepted as a student on the spot.

He began his studies without any knowledge of the subject, soon developing an enthusiasm for French and Spanish cave paintings. Then, in 1957, he moved to Edinburgh University. There he had planned to do research on the Picts, who also produced extraordin­ary art, but his supervisor, Stuart Piggott, persuaded him that the Scottish Bronze Age would make a more promising subject. He took to it immediatel­y, completing his doctoral thesis in less than two years. He also excavated a burial mound, settlement­s and caves in the north.

By 1960 his research had become well known, and with the backing of both Piggott and Clark he was appointed to a lecturing post in Cambridge, where he worked for more than quarter of a century, teaching generation­s of students who were to include many of the most influentia­l figures in archaeolog­y. He also taught Prince Charles. John did more than his share in the work of a department which in the early years was led by Clark, who had no appetite for university administra­tion.

In 1980 John became professor of European prehistory. Throughout his career he played a part in the organisati­on of British archaeolog­y. He was elected to the British Academy in 1978 and was awarded an honorary doctorate by Uppsala University, the European Archaeolog­ical Heritage prize, and the gold medals of the Society of Antiquarie­s of London and the Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquitie­s.

In 1985 he married Bryony Orme, his collaborat­or in the Somerset Levels Project, and in the following year left Cambridge and moved to Devon. There they worked together as new discoverie­s were made during peat-cutting and extended their interests to other wetland environmen­ts.

John also returned to his early interest in prehistori­c art, recording and interpreti­ng the drawings of weapons, people and boats pecked into the rocks of northern Europe three thousand years ago. Many of these panels were documented in detail for the first time.

As part of this work he produced two guidebooks to share his results with the public, Images of the Past (1990) and The Rock Carvings of Uppland (1994). This was an enormous undertakin­g and extended over three decades. The project was conducted with a few friends during what might have been mistaken for his retirement.

John’s energy and output were legendary. He was approachab­le, enthusiast­ic and persuasive. He had this advice for anyone contemplat­ing a new project: “Do it yourself, do it now, and do it quickly.” He was as good as his word, and the results of his researches were promptly published, lucid and influentia­l. Such was his vigour and productivi­ty that a conference to celebrate his 65th birthday was held two years afterwards because no one could believe his actual age.

He is survived by Bryony and by two sons and two daughters from his first marriage, to Mona Schiach, which ended in divorce.

• John Morton Coles, archaeolog­ist, born 25 March 1930; died 14 October 2020

 ??  ?? John Coles in the field in Sweden. He always looked for opportunit­ies to bring archaeolog­y to life, whether through playing musical instrument­s, testing weapons, coppicing or woodworkin­g
John Coles in the field in Sweden. He always looked for opportunit­ies to bring archaeolog­y to life, whether through playing musical instrument­s, testing weapons, coppicing or woodworkin­g
 ??  ?? An armed miniature figure portrayed in Bronze Age rock art in Husaby, southwest Sweden. The original engravings have been painted to display them to the public
An armed miniature figure portrayed in Bronze Age rock art in Husaby, southwest Sweden. The original engravings have been painted to display them to the public

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