More than 200 years after Waterloo, the bones of slain soldiers remain a mystery

More than 200 years after Napoleon met defeat at the Battle of Waterloothe bones of the soldiers killed on that famous battlefield continue to haunt Belgian researchers and experts, who use them to look back at that moment in history.

“So many bones — it’s really unique!” exclaimed one such historian, Bernard Wilkin, while standing in front of a forensic pathologist’s table with two skulls, three femurs and a hip bone.

Belgian anthropologist Mathilde Daumas shows the skull of a soldier who fought in the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, in which the French Army led by Napoleon was defeated and marked the end of the Napoleonic Wars, at the Institute for Forensic Medicine of Liege, i.e.  on February 1, 2023. / Credit: KENZO TRIBOUILLARD/AFP via Getty Images

Belgian anthropologist Mathilde Daumas shows the skull of a soldier who fought in the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, in which the French Army led by Napoleon was defeated and marked the end of the Napoleonic Wars, at the Institute for Forensic Medicine of Liege, i.e. on February 1, 2023. / Credit: KENZO TRIBOUILLARD/AFP via Getty Images

He was in an autopsy room at the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Liege, eastern Belgium, where tests are being carried out on the skeletal remains to determine the regions of origin of the four soldiers.

That is a challenge in itself.

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

That armed conflict on June 18, 1815, put an end to Napoleon Bonaparte’s ambitions to conquer Europe to build a great empire, and approximately 20,000 soldiers were killed as a result.

Historians have since won this battle, and – with advances in genetics, medicine and scanning – researchers can now piece together pages of the past from the remains buried in the ground.

Some of these remains were recovered through archaeological excavations, for example only last year which made it possible to restore a skeleton found not far from a field hospital founded by Britain’s Duke of Wellington.

That excavation also revealed many horse bones. It is estimated that thousands of horses were killed during the battle, “because the great glory of the cavalry charge ended in death for too many,” according to the archaeologists.

But the remains that Wilkin examined came in another way.

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 me afterwards and said to me, ‘Mr. Wilkin, there are some Prussians in my’ I have an attic.’”

Wilkin said with a laugh, the man said “he showed me photos on his phone and told me that someone gave him these bones so he can put them on display … which he refused to do on grounds ethical.”

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

The main object of interest in the collection is the right foot and almost all of its toes — that of a “Prussian soldier,” according to the middle-aged man.

“It is very rare to see a well-preserved leg, because the small bones at the ends usually disappear into the ground,” said Mathilde Daumas, an anthropologist at Universite Libre de Bruxelles who is part of the research work.

Regarding the so-called “Prussian” base, the experts are cautious.

The place where it was found was the village of Plancenoit, where troops on the Prussian and Napoleonic sides fought fiercely, Wilkin said, pointing out that it could be the remains of French soldiers.

Fragments of boots and metal buckles found among the remains show uniforms worn by soldiers from the German side against the French.

But “we know that soldiers removed the dead from their own gear,” the historian said.

Clothing and accessories are not reliable indicators of the nationality of the skeletons found on the Waterloo battlefield, he stressed.

More reliable, these days, are DNA tests.

Dr. Philippe Boxho, a forensic pathologist who worked on the remains, said there were still parts of the bones that should yield DNA results, and he believed two more months of analysis should provide answers.

“As long as the material is dry we can do something. Our biggest enemy is moisture, which makes everything disappear,” he explained.

The teeth in particular, with traces of strontium, a naturally occurring chemical element that accumulates in human bones, can indicate specific regions through their geology, he said.

Wilkin said it would be a “fantastic case” for research to find that the remains of the “three to five” soldiers examined came from the French and German sides.

Among those killed at Waterloo were Warden Arthur HeylandA 33-year-old Irishman who wrote a letter to his wife the day before he died.

Heyland wrote, “Mary, let me remind you that the happiest days of my life are from your love and affection, and that I died only loving you. My sons, Mary, I leave you. girl, God bless you. Áine, Seán, may heaven protect you… May my children comfort you, my love, Mary.”

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