Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2016
This paper focuses on evidence from firewood remains from a Napoleonic camplocated at Étaples (in the north of France), inhabited between 1803 and1805. The combination of archaeological and relevant historical recordsindicates that wood resources, stockpiled for lighting and heating by thesoldiers, may have originated from two distinct areas: the army's officialforest and also the area around the camp, indicating possible difficultiesin wood supply at the end of its occupation. This study, therefore, usesarchaeological charcoal to reinforce military historical sources inunderstanding firewood economy and the harsh everyday life of the Napoleonicsoldier at the beginning of the nineteenth century.