Critical applications of KOCOA in Western Europe c. 26 BC - 1745 AD
dc.contributor.advisor
Ralston, Ian
dc.contributor.advisor
Romankiewicz, Tanja
dc.contributor.author
Brown, Craig James
dc.date.accessioned
2022-02-15T11:07:57Z
dc.date.available
2022-02-15T11:07:57Z
dc.date.issued
2021-11-18
dc.description.abstract
In the thirty years since Conflict Archaeology has evolved as a discipline, it has
grown exponentially in scope. In order to define a methodological and
conceptual framework for the discipline, conflict archaeologists in North America
have adopted standard military analytical procedures and terminology. KOCOA
(or OAKOC) is the standard military terrain analysis that conflict archaeologists
use to aid in defining battlefield boundaries and interpreting battlefield remains.
KOCOA is a military acronym that stands for Key or Decisive Terrain;
Observation and Fields of Fire; Cover and Concealment; Obstacles; and
Avenues of Approach and Withdrawal. The KOCOA approach has been utilized
with success within the United States on a number of Revolutionary War, Civil
War, and American Frontier Wars battlefields. The National Park Service (NPS)
requires the application of KOCOA in evaluating the preservation potential of
historic battlefields as part of the American Battlefield Protection Program
(ABPP).
Conflict Archaeologists have utilized KOCOA without appreciating its full
potential or limitations. To date, KOCOA has mostly been applied to terrestrial
battlefields that are at least partially preserved or otherwise historically
documented. The majority of these projects were conducted under the auspices
of the ABPP: the primary interest being the location and evaluation of defining
battlefield features. Few attempts have been made to employ KOCOA in an
academic setting in order to assess the influence of terrain on the conduct of
battles, on command decisions made, or as a tool in the interpretation of
archaeological assemblages for the purpose of reconstructing battles that are
devoid of direct historical documentation. If KOCOA is to develop as part of the
methodological and conceptual framework of Conflict Archaeology, then it needs
to be applicable in wider chronological and geographical contexts.
This thesis critically evaluates the applicability of KOCOA through
answering a varied series of questions across a set of temporally and
categorically different Western European sites. In the well documented, early
modern Battle of Prestonpans (1745), KOCOA is used to rationalize how the
terrain influenced where the actual engagement took place. KOCOA is then
utilized to posit the location of the English siege lines and artillery fortifications
from the Siege of Edinburgh Castle (1573) that have been subsumed by the
urbanization of Edinburgh city center. The Second Scottish War of
Independence battlefield at Halidon Hill (1333) is well known, but the battle itself
is only documented in secondary chronicles, some written many years after the
battle. A KOCOA analysis was conducted to evaluate the accuracy of the
chronicles, as well as to show how the English selection of the terrain served as
a critical factor in the Scottish defeat. The location of sparsely documented
Battle of Dún Nechtain (685) has generated fierce debate among scholars. A
KOCOA analysis was undertaken to evaluate the terrain of Dunnichen and
Dunachton and demonstrate which may have been the site of the battle. The
Roman conquest of the Cantabrian oppidum at Monte Bernorio (c. 26 BC) is not
documented in classical sources. Ongoing archaeological excavations at Monte
Bernorio have recovered an artifact assemblage that was interpreted through a
KOCOA analysis in order to reconstruct the course of the battle.
The KOCOA method itself is critically evaluated as an analytical tool
based upon the case studies, and it shows that when informed by other
components of METT-T, KOCOA is applicable in wide range of chronologically
and categorically different sites, both directly documented and undocumented
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38576
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/1840
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Brown, C. J. (2012). The Battle Of Chelsea Creek, May 27-28, 1775: KOCOA military terrain analysis applied to heavily urbanized and coastal marine environments Boston, Chelsea, and Revere, Massachusetts (Masters thesis). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (UMI No. 1512025)
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Brown, C. J., Mastone, V. T., & Maio, C. V. (2013). The Revolutionary War battle America forgot: Chelsea Creek, 27-28 May 1775. The New England Quarterly, 86(3), 398-432. DOI: 10.1162/TNEQ_a_00295
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Brown, C. J., Torres-Martínez, J. F., Fernández-Götz, M. & Martínez Velasco, A. (2017) Fought under the walls of Bergida: KOCOA analysis of the Roman attack on the Cantabrian oppidum of Monte Bernorio (Spain). Journal of Conflict Archaeology, 12(2), 115-138.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Maio, C. V., Tenenbaum, D. E., Brown, C. J., Mastone, V. T., & Gontz, A. M. (2013). Application of geographic information technologies to historical landscape reconstruction and military terrain analysis of an American Revolution battlefield: Preservation potential of historic lands in urbanized settings, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, Journal of Cultural Heritage, 14(4), 317-331. DOI: 10.1016/j.culher.2012.08.002
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Mastone, V. T., Brown, C. J. & Maio, C. V. (2011). Chelsea Creek – first naval engagement of the American Revolution Chelsea, East Boston, Revere, and Winthrop Suffolk County, Massachusetts. National Park Service, American Battlefield Protection Program, Washington, D.C.
en
dc.subject
Conflict Archaeology
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dc.subject
KOCOA
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dc.subject
battlefield archaeology
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dc.subject
archaeological terrain analysis
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dc.subject
battle of Prestonpans
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dc.subject
battle of Monte Bernorio
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dc.subject
KOCOA assessment
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dc.title
Critical applications of KOCOA in Western Europe c. 26 BC - 1745 AD
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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