Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’Hazebrouck

Contrary to what might be expected, aerial warfare during the Second World War left many vestiges in the ground of Western Europe. This warfare represented a massive commitment on the part of the belligerents, a war front in its own right, causing considerable human and material losses. Since the en...

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Main Author: Yves Roumegoux
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication 2018-08-01
Series:In Situ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/16543
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author Yves Roumegoux
author_facet Yves Roumegoux
author_sort Yves Roumegoux
collection DOAJ
description Contrary to what might be expected, aerial warfare during the Second World War left many vestiges in the ground of Western Europe. This warfare represented a massive commitment on the part of the belligerents, a war front in its own right, causing considerable human and material losses. Since the end of the 1990s, research has begun to focus on these remains, like the wreck of a Lancaster bomber unearthed in 1997 in Lorraine. In 2006, Air France, in association with the Dutch airline company KLM, contacted the regional archaeological services of the Nord – Pas-de-Calais region, asking the service to carry out an excavation on the presumed place of the crash, on 1 September 1944, of a British Spitfire IX fighter, piloted by Captain Jan Plesman, son of the founder of KLM. The excavation, however, revealed the remains of a German aircraft, a Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-6 fighter, still containing the body of the pilot who, thanks to the plate bearing his registration number, was identified as the Sergeant Horst Seemann, shot down on 4 September 1943, a year earlier, during an interception flight during an allied raid on the Hazebrouck railway marshalling yard. The remains of Horst Seemann were buried on 11 July 2006 at the German military cemetery at Bourdon (Somme). The wife of his younger brother, now deceased, and some of his nephews and nieces came especially from Germany to attend the funeral. Military aircraft crash sites participate fully in questions of memory and history through their cultural value as historical artifacts and through the information they can provide regarding both the circumstances of the loss of the plane, and the plane as such.
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spelling doaj-art-ffe9e3f9074b414891ffa0e08c58cd7b2025-01-09T12:43:15ZfraMinistère de la Culture et de la CommunicationIn Situ1630-73052018-08-013510.4000/insitu.16543Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’HazebrouckYves RoumegouxContrary to what might be expected, aerial warfare during the Second World War left many vestiges in the ground of Western Europe. This warfare represented a massive commitment on the part of the belligerents, a war front in its own right, causing considerable human and material losses. Since the end of the 1990s, research has begun to focus on these remains, like the wreck of a Lancaster bomber unearthed in 1997 in Lorraine. In 2006, Air France, in association with the Dutch airline company KLM, contacted the regional archaeological services of the Nord – Pas-de-Calais region, asking the service to carry out an excavation on the presumed place of the crash, on 1 September 1944, of a British Spitfire IX fighter, piloted by Captain Jan Plesman, son of the founder of KLM. The excavation, however, revealed the remains of a German aircraft, a Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-6 fighter, still containing the body of the pilot who, thanks to the plate bearing his registration number, was identified as the Sergeant Horst Seemann, shot down on 4 September 1943, a year earlier, during an interception flight during an allied raid on the Hazebrouck railway marshalling yard. The remains of Horst Seemann were buried on 11 July 2006 at the German military cemetery at Bourdon (Somme). The wife of his younger brother, now deceased, and some of his nephews and nieces came especially from Germany to attend the funeral. Military aircraft crash sites participate fully in questions of memory and history through their cultural value as historical artifacts and through the information they can provide regarding both the circumstances of the loss of the plane, and the plane as such.https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/16543Second World Waraviationaviation archaeologyGerman air forcemotorwar vestiges
spellingShingle Yves Roumegoux
Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’Hazebrouck
In Situ
Second World War
aviation
aviation archaeology
German air force
motor
war vestiges
title Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’Hazebrouck
title_full Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’Hazebrouck
title_fullStr Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’Hazebrouck
title_full_unstemmed Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’Hazebrouck
title_short Entre ciel et terre. Histoire de l’aéronautique militaire et archéologie : l’exemple d’Hazebrouck
title_sort entre ciel et terre histoire de l aeronautique militaire et archeologie l exemple d hazebrouck
topic Second World War
aviation
aviation archaeology
German air force
motor
war vestiges
url https://journals.openedition.org/insitu/16543
work_keys_str_mv AT yvesroumegoux entrecieletterrehistoiredelaeronautiquemilitaireetarcheologielexempledhazebrouck