Turkish Soldier’s Grave Found at Gallipoli

News February 2, 2017

(Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-S29571/CC-BY-SA 3.0)
SHARE:
Gallipoli Turkish grave
(Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-S29571/CC-BY-SA 3.0)

ÇANAKKALE, TURKEY—The grave of a Turkish soldier named Sergeant Mehmet, who was killed during World War I's Battle of Gallipoli, was found during a landscaping project conducted by the Gallipoli Site Management Directorate, according to a report in The Daily Sabah. The Battle of Gallipoli was fought by around a million soldiers between April 25, 1915, and January 9, 1916, when the Allies attempted to invade Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire. Tens of thousands were killed. Sergeant Mehmet’s grave was found in an area that had been the site of a military hospital and graveyard during the eight-month-long battle. His tombstone, inscribed in Arabic, had been covered with vegetation. A new stone translates the dedication into modern Turkish. For more on archaeology at the Gallipoli battlefield, go to “Letter from Turkey: Anzac's Next Chapter.”

  • Features January/February 2017

    Top 10 Discoveries of 2016

    ARCHAEOLOGY’s editors reveal the year’s most compelling finds

    Read Article
    (Image Courtesy Brett Seymour, EUA/WHOI/ARGO)
  • Features January/February 2017

    Hoards of the Vikings

    Evidence of trade, diplomacy, and vast wealth on an unassuming island in the Baltic Sea

    Read Article
    (Gabriel Hildebrand/The Royal Coin Cabinet, Sweden)
  • Features January/February 2017

    Fire in the Fens

    A short-lived settlement provides an unparalleled view of Bronze Age life in eastern England

    Read Article
    (Courtesy The Cambridge Archaeological Unit)
  • Letter from Laos January/February 2017

    A Singular Landscape

    New technology is enabling archaeologists to explore a vast but little-studied mortuary complex in war-damaged Laos

    Read Article
    (Jerry Redfern)