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View Full Version : Fury over the pillage of Crimea's bloodied battlefields



gaz
10-12-2004, 05:33 PM
October 12, 2004

By Jeremy Page in Sebastopol and David Lister

War relics are being illegally dug up and sold 150 years after the Charge of the Light Brigade

ARMY veterans expressed outrage yesterday at the discovery by The Times of an increasingly lucrative trade in relics plundered from one of the most famous battlefields in British military history.
Just two weeks before the 150th anniversary of the Charge of the Light Brigade, the Royal British Legion expressed deep concern at the plunder of relics from that site which are then sold illegally to foreign tourists and collectors for up to $400 (£225) an item.

Other Crimean war battlefields, and sometimes even the graves of more than 20,000 British troops killed in that conflict, are also being pillaged, The Times has discovered.

“However old the graves may be, any soldier, whatever nationality, deserves to rest undisturbed on the battlefield where he has fallen,” said Jeremy Lillies, spokesman for the Royal British Legion.

“It’s a terrible thing if that is happening, and the fact that the 150th anniversary is coming up makes it especially poignant,” said Captain Gary Locker, regimental secretary of the Light Dragoons which incorporates the old 13th Light Dragoons who were at the forefront of the charge. “It’s like all battlefields. We expect them to be left in perpetuity.”

To the passing visitor, the Valley of Death could not look more peaceful. Vineyards and wild flowers cover the ground where the Light Brigade charged into the mouth of hell. A passenger train rattles gently between the hills from which the Russian cannons volleyed and thundered on the 600.

But 150 years after the slaughter immortalised by Alfred Lord Tennyson, this tranquil spot has become a new battleground between local authorities, historians, collectors and veterans over the treasure trove of relics lying beneath the sandy soil.

Thousands of regimental badges and buttons, belt buckles and bayonets were buried alongside the estimated 750,000 soldiers killed when British, French, Italian and Turkish troops fought the Russians for control of this Black Sea peninsula.

Excavating the relics is, in theory, restricted to a handful of licensed local collectors. Taking them out of the country is technically illegal. In reality unlicensed locals with metal detectors continue to dig for relics from the siege of Sebastopol and the battles of Alma, Balaklava and Inkerman.

“The British buy the most,” says Zina, who runs a stall outside the Panorama Museum in Sevastopol. “I don’t know how they take them out of the country, but I imagine they smuggle them in their luggage.”

Zina, who asked to be identified only by her first name, openly displays a selection of regimental buttons, coins, bullets and tobacco pipes that she says were sold to her by local children. The more expensive memorabilia — belt buckles, cap badges and rare buttons — are sold behind closed doors.

The problem is that Ukrainian Customs and police lack the resources and the inclination to crack down on the trade. And foreign buyers have no way to check whether a relic was unearthed by accident in the foundations of a new house, or looted from a grave.

“I’ve seen incidents of graves having been robbed,” said Patrick Mercer, the Tory MP for Newark and a Crimean War historian. “Most of the dead were not buried in cemeteries, but in shallow graves.”

Alan Rooney, the managing director of Midas Tours, which runs battlefield trips to the region, says that the Ukrainians are merely “catching up”.

“They’re new to the game of battlefield tourism because Sebastopol was a closed city ten years ago. I’ve heard of graves being plundered but maybe this is all more visible at the moment because they’re so aware of the 150th anniversary.”

Some foreign collectors argue that they are simply retrieving national property, but local historians say that the relics should be used to boost Crimea’s fledgeling tourist industry. Pavel Lyashuk, a curator of the Panorama Museum, has opened an exhibition of relics, including crockery, domino pieces, a Schweppes soda water bottle, a can of Fortnum and Mason boiled beef, and a French sardine tin.
“There is no war in this exhibition — only the lives of the people who lived on both sides,” Mr Lyashuk explains. “These relics illustrate the lives of the average people.”

He says that in Soviet times there was no market for the relics, and only children used to collect them. But soon after the Soviet Union’s collapse, the first foreign collectors arrived. A hat badge would go for about £2.80, a gold sovereign for £28.

Prices have soared as many of the rarer items have been dug up and taken overseas. Under the law, licensed excavators must offer finds to the museum. But it cannot compete with prices on the open market. A rare gilt button can fetch up to $50. A bayonet might sell for $100. And a Royal Marine cap badge — one of the rarest — could go for as much as $400.

“Picking up a musket ball off the ground is legitimate, I think,” said Mr Mercer. “But you have to draw a line at robbing the country blind.”

THE CONFLICT

The Charge of the Light Brigade took place on October 15, 1854, during the Crimean War

Britain, France and Turkey declared war on Russia after her 1854 invasion of Dubroja in Romania. The allies wanted to stop Russian encroachment into the Ottoman Empire

The charge took place during the battle at Balaclava, which lies near Sebastopol

Lord Lucan gave the order to Lord Cardigan to lead a British charge down from the nearby causeway heights, to where the Russians were taking British guns

The result was a massacre. Nearly 400 of the 673 men who charged down the valley were killed or captured. 500 horses died

British and Russians were moved by the heroism of the British soldiers. General Liprandi told his English PoWs: “You are noble fellows.” In England, Tennyson’s poem immortalised “the noble 600”

Story here (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,171-1304955,00.html)

gaz
10-12-2004, 05:35 PM
October 12, 2004

Heroes marked with the stamp of history honoured by the Royal Mail
By Jeremy Page

IN 1854, aged just 26, David Muir was sent to a distant land to fight in a war now synonymous with military mismanagement and incompetent leadership.
Over the next two years, the pipe major in the 42nd Regiment fought in four ferocious battles and endured appalling living conditions as his commanders pursued their illconceived campaign to push the Russians out of Crimea.

The stoical courage of soldiers such as Piper Muir has long been eclipsed by stories of The Charge of the Light Brigade, the “Thin Red Line” and Florence Nightingale.

Today the Royal Mail pays tribute to these unsung heroes by featuring Piper Muir and five other soldiers on a set of stamps to mark the 150th anniversary of the Crimean War.

The six photographs, taken on the soldiers’ return from Crimea, were chosen to highlight the bravery of the men whose suffering changed the nation’s perception of warfare and revolutionised the Armed Forces. But they are also a reminder of the unprecedented role that the media — especially The Times — played in focusing public attention on the plight of ordinary soldiers.

Alistair Duthie, a pipe major in the Black Watch, travelled to Sebastopol last week to recreate for the Royal Mail some of the pictures of the Crimean War taken by The Times’s photographer Roger Fenton.

“It may have been 150 years ago but we shouldn’t forget that those soldiers were sent out there for nothing that would benefit them,” he told The Times.

“What he sent back and how he aroused the public’s anger — that was fantastic. The soldiers were treated like scumbags.”

Fenton’s photographs of the bleak battlefield landscapes and images of life in the poorly equipped camps together with the dispatches sent over the recently invented telegraph wire by The Times correspondent, William Howard Russell, showed the public for the first time the reality of life on the front line.

The combined effect was electrifying.

Florence Nightingale, a German-trained nurse, was sent out to improve sanitary conditions in hospitals after Russell and others observed how quickly disease spread among the wounded. Of the 21,000 British dead, as many as 16,000 succumbed to disease.

The London-based French chef, Alexis Soyer, invented the portable battlefield stove, which revolutionised the organisation of army provisions.

The Editor of The Times, John Delane, together with the MP John Roebuck, called for a government inquiry. Public demonstrations and petitions eventually led to the fall of Lord Aberdeen’s Government in 1855.

Queen Victoria was so shocked by the reports that she introduced the Victoria Cross and toured the country with Prince Albert to greet returning soldiers.

Story here (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,171-1304950,00.html)

gaz
10-12-2004, 05:36 PM
The Charge of the Light Brigade

Half a league half a league
Half a league onward
All in the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred:
‘Forward the Light Brigade
Charge for the guns' he said
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred


Forward the Light Brigade!'
Was there a man dismay'd?
Not tho' the soldier knew
Some one had blunder'd:
Theirs not to make reply,
Theirs not to reason why,
Theirs but to do & die,
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.


Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon in front of them
Volley'd & thunder'd;
Storm'd at with shot & shell,
Boldly they rode & well,
Into the jaws of Death,
Into the mouth of Hell
Rode the six hundred.


Flash'd all their sabres bare,
Flash'd as they turn'd in air,
Sabring the gunners there,
Charging an army while
All the world wonder'd:
Plunged in the battery-smoke
Right thro' the line they broke;
Cossack & Russian
Reel'd from the sabre-stroke,
Shatter'd & sunder'd.
Then they rode back, but not
Not the six hundred.


Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon behind them
Volley'd & thunder'd;
Storm'd at with shot & shell,
While horse & hero fell,
They that had fought so well
Came thro' the jaws of Death
Back from the mouth of Hell,
All that was left of them
Left of six hundred.


When can their glory fade?
O the wild charge they made!
All the world wonder'd.
Honour the charge they made!
Honour the Light Brigade,
Noble six hundred!

Alfred Lord Tennyson

oldsoak
10-13-2004, 09:11 AM
- I understand that theres confusion over just what the Light Brigade were ordered to do....

- I say , Hoskins, was that 'attack 'or 'get back' ?

- and thats a good reason why we need reliable secure comms. :)

W(M)D
10-13-2004, 09:34 AM
.....thats a good reason why we need reliable secure comms. :)

Another good reason why we need good 'ruperts' that know what they are actually doing :D

fantassin
10-13-2004, 11:50 AM
And as always, when mentioning the charge of the Light Brigade, the vital contribution of the French Cavalry, namely the 4th "Chasseurs d'Afrique" under Général d'Alonville is forgotten....

Without them, the Light Brigade would not have been able to retreat.

The battle.

The charge was made by the Light Brigade of the British cavalry. Made up of the 4th and 13th Light Dragoons, 17th Lancer, and the 8th and 11th Hussars, it was commanded by Major General the Earl of Cardigan. Together with the Heavy Brigade (the Royal Dragoon Guards and the Scots Greys) it was the main British cavalry force at the battle; overall command of the cavalry was with the Earl of Lucan.

Lucan was delivered an order from the army commmander Lord Raglan stating that "Lord Raglan wishes the cavalry to advance rapidly to the front and to prevent the enemy carrying away the guns. Horse Artillery may accompany. French cavalry is on your left. Immediate." The order was drafted by Brigadier Airey and was carried by Captain Lewis Nolan, who may have carried further oral instructions, but he was killed during the charge so that is conjecture.

In response to the order Cardigan led 673 (or 661) cavalry men straight into the valley made between the Fediukhine Heights and the Causeway Heights. The Russian forces, under Pavel Liprandi, on the sides of the valley and at the end included over fifty artillery pieces and around 20 battalions of infantry. It appears that the order was interpreted to refer to the mass of Russian guns in a redoubt at the end of the valley, around a mile away, when, in actual fact, Raglan had been referring to a set of redoubts on the reverse slope of the hill forming the left (to the cavalry) side of the valley, which, although clearly visible to Raglan, were hidden from the view of the Light Brigade down in the valley. The brigade reached the end of the valley and forced the Russian forces from the redoubt but suffered heavy casualties and were soon forced back. Lucan failed to provide any support for Cardigan; he may have been motivated by personal enmity with his brother-in-law. The troops of the Heavy Brigade entered the mouth of the valley but did not advance further. The French cavalry, the Chasseurs d'Afrique, was more effective; they broke the Russian line on the Fediukhine Heights and later covered the remains of the Light Brigade as they withdrew.

When the Light Brigade regrouped there were only 195 men still with horses. The brigade had lost 118 men killed and 127 wounded; 362 horses were killed. The stupidity of the action and its reckless bravery prompted Marshal Pierre Bosquet to state C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas la guerre ("It is magnificent, but it is not war.") Initially the Russian commanders believed the British soldiers must have been drunk and it measurably improved the reputation of British cavalry during the rest of the conflict.

Tennyson praises the Brigade, "When can their glory fade? O the wild charge they made!", while mourning the appalling futility of the charge: "Not tho' the soldier knew, someone had blunder'd... Charging an army, while all the world wonder'd."

Books which analyse the events leading up to the event offer insight into British military history and also into the baleful consequences which can result from courage coupled with lack of insight.