4,566
Views
11
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

A military camp in the middle of nowhere: mobilities, dislocation and the archaeology of a Second World War German military base in Finnish Lapland

ORCID Icon, , , &
Pages 3-28 | Received 06 Sep 2016, Accepted 25 Aug 2017, Published online: 08 Dec 2017

References

  • Airio, P. 2014. Aseveljeys. Saksalaiset ja suomalaiset Itä-Lapissa 1941–1944. Helsinki: Docendo.
  • Alftan, R. 2005. Aseveljet: Saksalais-suomalainen aseveljeys 1942–1944. Helsinki: WSOY.
  • Arvelin, M. 2009. Sodan piikilangat. Totta ja tarinaa Inarin vankileireistä. Lapin legendat 4. Inari: Ukko-Media.
  • Beaudry, M., and T. Parno, eds. 2013. Archaeologies of Mobility and Movement. New York: Springer.
  • Björklund, E. 1981. Petsamotrafiken. Danderyd: SÅ-Åkeriförlaget AB.
  • Grabowski, R., B. Olsen, Þ. Pétursdóttir, and C. Witmore. 2014. “Teillager 6 Sværholt: the Archaeology of a World War II Prisoner of War Camp in Finnmark, Arctic Norway.” Fennoscandia Archaeologica 31: 3–24.
  • Halter, H. 1942. Finnland. Wehrmacht tornisterzeitschrift. Berlin: Scherl.
  • Heinäaho, H., and P. Rautiainen. 2011. “Romua vai sotahistoriallisia aarteita?” Museo 2 (2011): 32–34.
  • Herva, V.-P. 2014. “Haunting Heritage in an Enchanted Land: Magic, Materiality and Second World War German Material Heritage in Finnish Lapland.” Journal of Contemporary Archaeology 1 (2): 297–321.10.1558/jca.v1i2.2033
  • Herva, V.-P., E. Koskinen-Koivisto, O. Seitsonen, and S. Thomas. 2016. “‘I Have Better Stuff at Home’: Alternative Archaeologies and Private Collecting of World War II Artefacts in Finnish Lapland.” World Archaeology 48 (2): 267–281. doi:10.1080/00438243.2016.1184586.
  • von Hessen, W. 1986. Aufzeichnungen. Kronberg/Taunus: Privatdruck.
  • Huttunen, P. 1990. Muotkanruoktu (Peltojoki-Peäldujuuha)/Vankityöleiri, Huoltolaitos? Survey report, National Board of Antiquities, Finland.
  • Ingold, T. 2011. Being Alive: Essays on Movement, Knowledge and Description. London: Routledge.
  • Joh. Parviaisen tehtaat O.y. 1942. Istruzioni per il montaggio de stalle in legno compensato con elenco e due disegni. Maggio 1942. Säynätsalo: Joh. Parviaisen tehtaat O.y.
  • Jokisipilä, M. 2005. “Napapiirin aseveljet.” In Aseveljet: Saksalais-Suomalainen aseveljeys 1942–1944, edited by R. Alftan, 9–51. WSOY: Helsinki.
  • Junila, M. 2000. Kotirintaman aseveljeyttä. Bibliotheca Historica 61. Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura.
  • Kallatsa, M. 2009. ”Suomen Saksalle luovuttamat sotavangit jatkosodan aikana.” Licentiate of Philosophy thesis., University of Tampere.
  • Kivimäki, V. 2012. “Between Defeat and Victory: Finnish Memory Culture of the Second World War.” Scandinavian Journal of History 37 (4): 482–504. doi:10.1080/03468755.2012.680178.
  • Knabe, K. 1983. Lapin lentotiedustelijat. Helsinki: Gummerus.
  • Korpi, K. 2010. Rintama ilman juoksuhautoja. Saksalaisten keskeiset rakentamiset, työmaat ja työvoima Pohjois-Suomessa 1941–1942. Studia Historica Septentrionalia 59. Tornio: Pohjois-Suomen historiallinen yhdistys.
  • Lehtola, V.-P. 2003. ”Tuhon ja nousun vuodet (1939–1965).” In Inari – Aanaar. Inarin historia jääkaudesta nykypäivään, edited by V.-P. Lehtola, 350–489. Oulu: Inarin kunta.
  • Löfgren, O. 2003. On Holiday. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
  • Mabre ( Max Martin Brehm). 1944. Fahrbahn Lappland. Höchstadt an der Aisch: Mens-Verlag.
  • MacKenzie, S. P. 2015. “Beating the Odds: Superstition and Human Agency in RAF Bomber Command, 1942–1945.” War in History 22 (3): 382–400.10.1177/0968344514525938
  • Mann, C., and C. Jörgensen. 2002. Hitler’s Arctic War: The German Campaigns in Norway, Finland, and The USSR 1940–1945. Hersham: Ian Allan.
  • Merkblatt 18a, 17. 1943. Merkblatt 18a/17. Taschenbuch für den Winterkrieg. Vom 5.8.1942–1943. Sine loco: Wehrmacht.
  • Merkblatt 18a, 26. 1944. Merkblatt 18a/26. Waldkampf Und Spähtruppausbildung In Finnland. Vom 14.2.1944. Sine loco: Wehrmacht.
  • Mikkonen, K. 2016. Parakkeja ja piikkilankaa. Rovaniemi: Lapin maakuntamuseo.
  • Minca, C. 2015. “Geographies of the Camp.” Political Geography 49: 74–83.10.1016/j.polgeo.2014.12.005
  • Nash, D. E. n.d. Tinned Meat in the German Army Iron Ration. Accessed April 1, 2015. http://www.dererstezug.com/Tinned_Meat_in_the_German_Army_Iron_Ration.htm
  • Naum, M. 2013. “The Malady of Emigrants: Homesickness and Longing in the Colony of New Sweden.” In Archaeologies of Mobility and Movement, edited by M. Beaudry and T. Parno, 165–177. New York: Springer.10.1007/978-1-4614-6211-8
  • Norberg-Schultz, C. 1980. Genius Loci: Towards a Phenomenology of Architecture. New York, NY: Rizzoli.
  • Otto, R. 2008. “Soviet Prisoners of War on the German Lapland Front, 1941–1944.” In Sotavangit ja internoidut. Kansallisarkiston artikkelikirja. Prisoners of War and Internees. A Book of Articles by the National Archives, edited by L. Westerlund, 64–113. Helsinki: Kansallisarkisto.
  • Pipping, K. (1947) 2008. Infantry Company as a Society. Department of Behavioural Sciences Publication Series 1. Number 3/2008. Helsinki: National Defence University.
  • Puutalo Oy. 1943. Finnische sperrholzzelte. Helsinki: Puutalo Oy.
  • Schütz, A., and T. Luckmann. 1973. The Structures of the Life-World. Vol. 1. Evanston: University Press.
  • Seamon, D. 1979. A Geography of the Lifeworld. New York: St. Martin’s.
  • Seamon, D. 2007. “Interconnections, Relationships, and Environmental Wholes: A Phenomenological Ecology of Natural and Built Worlds.” In To Renew the Face of the Earth: Phenomenology and Ecology, edited by D. Martino, 53–86. Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University Press.
  • Seitsonen, O., and Herva, V.-P. 2011. Forgotten in the Wilderness: WWII PoW Camps in Finnish Lapland. In Archaeologies of Internment, edited by A. Myers and G. Moshenska, 171–190. New York, NY: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9666-4_10 10.1007/978-1-4419-9666-4
  • Seitsonen, O., and Herva, V.-P. 2017. “‘War junk’ and cultural heritage: Viewpoints on the second world war german material culture in finnish lapland.” In War & Peace: Conflict and Resolution in Archaeology. Proceedings of the 45th Annual Chacmool Archaeology Conference, edited by A.K. Benfer, 170–185. Calgary: Chacmool Archaeology Association, University of Calgary.
  • Seitsonen, O., and Koskinen-Koivisto, E. 2017. “‘Where the F… is Vuotso’: Heritage of second world war forced movement and destruction in a sámi reindeer herding community in Finnish Lapland.” International Journal of Heritage Studies [online first]. doi:10.1080/13527258.2017.1378903.
  • Seitsonen, O., and K. Nordqvist. 2009. “New Mesolithic Sites in the Finnish Lapland Wilderness.” Research of the Muotkeduoddara doložat project in 2005–2007. Mesolithic Miscellany 19:2: 3–11.
  • Silvennoinen, O. 2008. Salaiset Aseveljet: Suomen Ja Saksan Turvallisuuspoliisiyhteistyö 1933–1944. Helsinki: Otava.
  • Suhonen, V. 2011. Jäämarssi – Suomen matkaopas 194–42 (Frozen Hell – Prisoners of War in Finland 1941–42). Directed by V. Suhonen [ Documentary movie]. Helsinki: Illume Oy.
  • Thomas, S., Seitsonen, O., and Herva, V.-P. 2016. “Nazi Memorabilia, Dark Heritage and Treasure Hunting as ‘Alternative’ Tourism: Understanding the Fascination With the Material Remains of World War II in Northern Finland.” Journal of Field Archaeology [Online first]. doi:10.1080/00934690.2016.1168769
  • Uola, M. 2012. Petsamo 1939–1944. Helsinki: Minerva.
  • Urry, J. 2007. Mobilities. Cambridge: Polity.
  • Wehrmacht. (1943) 2006. Wehrmachtin matkaopas Suomeen. Helsinki: Ajatus.
  • Westerlund, L. 2008a. “The German Strategic Use of POW Labor in the Far North.” In Prisoner of War deaths and People Handed Over to Germany and the Soviet Union in 1939–1955. A Research Report by the Finnish National Archives, edited by L. Westerlund, 95–135. Helsinki: Finnish National Archives.
  • Westerlund, L. 2008b. Saksan vankileirit Suomessa ja raja-alueilla 1941–1944. Helsinki: Tammi.
  • Ylimaunu, T., P. R. Mullins, J. Symonds, T. Kallio-Seppä, H. Heikkilä, M. Kuorilehto, and S. Tolonen. 2013. “Memory of Barracks: World War II German ‘Little Berlins’ and Post-War Urbanization in Oulu, and Tornio, Northern Finland.” Scandinavian Journal of History 38 (4): 525–548.10.1080/03468755.2013.822457