Waterloo Soldier

The Waterloo Soldier is the skeleton of a soldier who died during the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815. The skeleton is kept at the Memorial of Waterloo 1815.

The remains were discovered in 2012 during archaeological excavations carried out on the construction site of a new car park created at the approach of the bicentenary of the battle in June 2015.

It is believed the remains are those of a 23-year-old soldier from Hanover, fighting in the King's German Legion made of exiled Hanoverians who fought as part of the Duke of Wellington's army.

Context
The discovery is unique, as no other skeletons have been found on the battlefield site so far: before this discovery, according to Dominique Bosquet of the archaeological service in the Walloon Brabant province, "A soldier's remains were discovered in 1912, but subsequent DNA tests on the bones showed it was made of two different people, so it was a fake".

Only very seldom do archaeologists discover a skeleton from the time of the Battle of Waterloo, let alone a complete skeleton. This is due to a habit that was widespread in the 1830s and 1840s: human bones were considered as a great fertilizer for the soil to grow crops, with the consequence that the area around Waterloo was intensively searched for skeletons of soldiers. Mass graves were plundered, the bones were ground and the powder was sold to farmers. Historian John Sadler states that "Many who died that day in Waterloo were buried in shallow graves but their bodies were later disinterred and their skeletons taken. They were ground down and used as fertiliser and taken back home to be used on English crops.

Fertiliser companies raided other Napoleonic battlefields like Austerlitz and Leipzig, where the bones of fallen soldiers and horses were removed and shipped, usually to Hull, and on to bone-grinders, many in Doncaster.

This finally stopped in the 1860s after a Yorkshire newspaper ran a campaign criticizing the practice.

Discovery of the skeleton
The skeleton was found on 5 June 2012 in one of the 120 sounding trenches that were dug by the Archaeology Department of the Heritage Department of the Walloon Region during a preventive archaeological sounding campaign carried out before the redevelopment work on the site and the construction of the new 3-hectare car park planned as part of the developments related to the bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo.

These 120 trenches represented 10% of the total surface area of the car park.

The skeleton lay in trench D39, located at 500 m northwest of the Lion's Mound. Here stood the Allied rearguard at about 7:00 a.m., four hours before the battle began. The site is located a few hundred metres from the Farm of Mont-Saint-Jean, which that day housed an English field hospital (the infirmary of the Duke of Wellington's army), and close to the troops of the Sovereign Principality of the United Netherlands, of the Electorate of Hanover (the King's German Legion) and of Brunswick

A lead bullet found in the right lung was most likely the cause of death and, from the beginning, suggested that the skeleton belonged to a soldier who died during the Battle of Waterloo.

Examination of the skeleton
The remains, which according to the archaeological service of the province of Walloon Brabant escaped looting, were lying at a depth of 80 cm.

Although a number of bones are missing, there is nothing to suggest that this is due to amputation or injury: the skull, knee and left foot were damaged by the excavator during the excavation, while the right foot and hands appear to have been previously displaced by the farm plows.

Anthropological and archaeological examinations showed that the man was most likely wearing pants and a shirt. The absence of metal buttons, on the other hand, indicates that the soldier was not wearing a uniform jacket when he was buried: it is possible that it was removed during the examination of his wounds. The fact that the corpse was only stripped of his military possessions (uniform jacket, weapons) while other objects were found near him seems to indicate that the man was buried in a hurry, as if one of his comrades had quickly buried him to protect him from the looters.

Examination of the pelvis indicates a male aged 23 to 25 years: this conclusion is supported by the observation of the sacrum which was not yet fully developed, indicating that growth was not complete. The dimensions of the femur of the individual indicate a height of approximately 1.61 m.

The soldier was relatively frail and slightly hunchbacked, which would have rendered him not acceptable for military service in most modern armies.

One tooth is worn down, possibly from ripping open paper cones containing gunpowder.

Objects
Several objects were found near the skeleton. They are of great interest for the reconstruction of the soldier's past.

Lead bullet
Just between the ribs, the scientists have found a lead bullet having a diameter of 16.4 mm and a weight of 23 grams. There is no doubt that this projectile was fired from a French musket. This type of bullet was designed for the French musket of 1777. The British bullets had a larger calibre: they weighed 32 g and had a diameter of 19 mm. It is also certain that the bullet was fatal and that the injured person was transported away from the frontline because he could not have done so on his own.

Piece of fabric
In the course of the examination, a piece of British-made fabric with a typical British weaving pattern was found. It is most likely a fragment of a uniform jacket or saddle pad.

Purse and coins
Near the pelvis, 28 coins were found, to which three pieces of cloth were glued. Glass beads were sewn onto two of the pieces of fabric. One of the coins came from Austria, while at least two coins were minted in the Electorate of Hanover. Eight coins were minted in Paris and one 12 French denier coin was produced in Lille in 1791–1792, i.e. during the French Revolution. One of the coins had been in circulation in the Principality of Brunswick for over a century.

Other objects
Other objects were discovered near the skeleton, such as two rifle flints, a small red pellet made of cinnabar (a mercury sulphide used as a pigment or in medicine), an iron spoon, a fragment of a wooden box bearing the letters "FCB" and the date "1792", an iron buckle and a pocketknife.

The two rifle flints correspond to the dimensions of the muskets of the British army, in which the Hanoverians were integrated.

The date "1792" could be the date of birth of the soldier, who died at the age of 23 in Waterloo, in accordance with the anthropological analysis mentioned above.

Hanoverian nationality
Because of the foreign coins in his possession, the soldier would certainly have been neither French nor British. On the other hand, French currencies circulated among the troops of Hanover at the same time as the currencies of their own country and surrounding states, including Brunswick.: so the coins found next to the corpse seem to indicate that the soldier fought under the flag of the Electorate of Hanover.

Hypothetical identity
The Welsh historian Gareth Glover, a Waterloo specialist, went further and advanced the identity of the deceased soldier by consulting archives: for him, it would be Friedrich Brandt, 23 years old, a soldier of the King's German Legion, a unit composed of Hanoverians (Germans) loyal to the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland also the Elector of Hanover, George III.

Glover could only find three German soldiers with the initials "F B" (no middle initial being recorded in the records ): the first fought on a different part of the battlefield to where the skeleton was found, the second is said to have died from his injuries near Brussels in August 1815, more than a month after the battle, so according to Glover there is only one candidate left: Friedrich Brandt.

"No-one can be 100% sure that the skeleton is Friedrich Brandt but with the information we have, this candidate is by far the most likely" says the historian. "From a purely scientific point of view, identifying this person will never be possible for me", Gareth Glover himself admitted: "it's one scenario out of a hundred".

Controversy around the exhibition at the Memorial of Waterloo 1815
The remains were put on show on 23 May 2015 at the Memorial of Waterloo 1815 in the Belgian province of Walloon Brabant. The decision to show the remains in a display box has shocked some British historians, like Tony Pollard who tweeted: "He was a soldier. He died in battle. He deserves a grave". Military historian Rob Schäfer said: "It doesn't have to be a military [funeral], just a dignified funeral. He can go home to Hanover … a burial in England would be great. Anything but being in a display box".

On the Belgian side, the institution insists the identity of the dead soldier is unknown, and the decision is justified as follows: "The issue of his presence at the Memorial was discussed within the design team, as well as among the various researchers who were looking at him. Ultimately, it seemed to everybody that the greatest homage that could be paid to him was to consider him, with the respect to which he is entitled and that the museum exhibit has sought to ensure, as the anonymous and silent representative of the men who perished that day in the same tragic circumstances".

The director of the Belgian Tourist Office for Brussels and Wallonia, said: "The purpose of the Memorial was not to shock but to pay tribute" and she added that there was no financial motivation, as the Memorial is a non-profit organisation.

Gareth Glover stresses that the corpse "remains unnamed as the Belgian archaeologists will not agree that the box was 'definitely' belonging to the skeleton; although they offer no explanation why it was placed in the ground with the individual burial if it wasn't his property".