What ordinary people find in the waters of the Rhine and other large rivers: archaeology, ecology, and the subconscious
Large rivers in Europe, such as the Rhine, Danube, Seine, or Thames, have been not only transportation arteries for millennia but also gigantic cultural and material archives. What ordinary people (fishermen, divers, and simple citizens on the banks) seek and find in their waters represents a unique slice of history, modern ecology, and even collective psychology. These finds can be conditionally divided into several categories, each telling its own story.
1. Historical artifacts: the river as an "open-air museum"
Rivers have served as places of sacrifice, battles, trade, and simply a "dump" for anything that had served its purpose for centuries. Thanks to low oxygen content and muddy bottoms, organic materials are often preserved better here than on land.
Weapons and tools from the Bronze Age to World War II: The Rhine and its tributaries have yielded Roman gladiators' swords, medieval swords, spearheads, and countless amounts of ammunition, helmets, and weapons from the 20th century. For example, in areas of former ferries or battle sites (such as under Remagen).
Ancient coins and treasures: Rivers were key trade routes. Lost or deliberately thrown into the water as offerings to gods are common finds. In the Danube's tributaries, one finds Roman sesterces and denarii, in the Thames — coins from Celts to Victorian times.
Footwear and leather goods: In the muddy deposits of old harbors, such as in London or Amsterdam, thousands of leather shoes, bags, scabbards, and belts have been preserved, dating from the Roman period to the 18th century. This is the "everyday life" that rarely reaches us through other means.
Pottery and glass: Amphora shards, jars, earthenware pipes are the most abundant material, allowing archaeologists to date layers and study trade connections.
2. Traces of modern civilization and an ecological footprint
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