The identity disc has become an iconic piece of military kit, representing a physical embodiment of the soldier’s identity. Despite their visual familiarity and their important role Zahrodisc was designed to facilitate the identification of soldiers who died on the battlefield, but a change in production material in 1914 had the unintended consequence of creating tens of thousands of missing and unknown soldiers. Identity discs are objects which transcended the military need to account for deaths, responding also to the Governmental need to mediate public grief. Their existence facilitated the development of graves registration practice resulting in the rapid transformation of burial practices during an ongoing war. On the Home Front, the d...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This dissertation concerns the politics, aesthetics, and meanings of the British dead around the wor...
Contested Objects breaks new ground in the interdisciplinary study of material culture. Its focus is...
Following the ratification of the 1906 Geneva Convention, in August the British Army approved the de...
The First World War resulted in an unprecedented number of casualties on both sides of the divide. S...
This thesis examines the relationship between material culture, war memory, and identity for South A...
Historians have generally analysed the commemorative activities of the Imperial War Graves Commissio...
The armed conflicts of the twentieth century have arguably been one of the most dramatic social forc...
In 1915, one year into World War I, Fabian Arthur Goulstone Ware founded the Imperial War Graves Com...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
In September 2017, an archaeological excavation at RAF Thorpe Abbotts (also known as Station 139) un...
Almost nothing is known about the treatment of the British military dead of the Second World War. I...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This dissertation concerns the politics, aesthetics, and meanings of the British dead around the wor...
Contested Objects breaks new ground in the interdisciplinary study of material culture. Its focus is...
Following the ratification of the 1906 Geneva Convention, in August the British Army approved the de...
The First World War resulted in an unprecedented number of casualties on both sides of the divide. S...
This thesis examines the relationship between material culture, war memory, and identity for South A...
Historians have generally analysed the commemorative activities of the Imperial War Graves Commissio...
The armed conflicts of the twentieth century have arguably been one of the most dramatic social forc...
In 1915, one year into World War I, Fabian Arthur Goulstone Ware founded the Imperial War Graves Com...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
In September 2017, an archaeological excavation at RAF Thorpe Abbotts (also known as Station 139) un...
Almost nothing is known about the treatment of the British military dead of the Second World War. I...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This thesis examines the processes by which British male civilians became soldiers during the First ...
This dissertation concerns the politics, aesthetics, and meanings of the British dead around the wor...
Contested Objects breaks new ground in the interdisciplinary study of material culture. Its focus is...