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Cite this as : Kersting, T. Beneath the visible landscape lie numerous layers, invisible at first sight: this is familiar territory for archaeologists. That more or less the entire landscape is 'contaminated' with the history of terror, with its abuse for purposes of the exclusion, exploitation, and acceptance of the complete annihilation of people is a thought that imposes itself when trying to trace the sites of terror in the landscape Bernbeck , 7, after Pollack , 53, who also takes a decidedly archaeological perspective.
The variety of archaeological monuments from 20th-century wars preserved in the soil of the federal state of Brandenburg is wide, and includes examples from the military-weapon industry, traces of the war itself crashed aeroplanes, trenches , relics of terror mainly camps and industrial grounds , and of suppression by National Socialist-dictatorship in East Germany.
Many of them have already been investigated by researchers with the State Archaeology Museum in Brandenburg over the last 25 years Haubold-Stolle et al. Most modern monument protection laws in Germany no longer have any age restriction for archaeological monuments. In many regions there is a considerable density of sites and material witnesses of war and terror from two world wars.
Archaeology of contemporary history is not an academic gimmick for archaeological heritage management, but a concrete and urgent duty: the monuments are there and their number is decreasing. Since the mids, the monument offices have been dealing with a broadening range of 20th-century monuments in the ground. The 'omnipresence of concentration camps' is a fact and a task for archaeology. And yet they are only part of the variety of monuments from the war-torn 20th century that are preserved in the ground.
Sometimes even graves of fallen soldiers can become the subject of archaeological documentation during planned reburials, although they are normally protected as war sites Figure 4. The reaction of the public is often quite different from their reaction to 'normal' archaeology: aspects of crime and suffering, victims and commemoration have to be taken into account. Here, archaeology takes on a new role: it gains current social relevance as a body of evidence against tendencies of relativisation and denial of Nazi crimes.