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         European Low Countries Archaeology:     more detail

1. Western European Archaeology
prehistory of the low countries. J. Bintliff. John Bintliff is Professor of Classical archaeology. He was Thematic Network for archaeology of the european SOCRATES program, and
http://archaeology.about.com/cs/westerneurope
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Western European Archaeology
Guide picks Archaeology of the greater European world
Celtic Europe

Subtitled "an online resource for students," this web page includes a considerable quantity of information on archaeology, linguistics, mythology, and history of the Celtic groups of Europe. AREA Archives of European Archaeology
A site dedicated to the history of European archaeology, contains catalog data and links to actual archives from the Western European countries. The Ancient City of Athens By Kevin Glowacki and Nancy Klein at Indiana University, a large, illustrated site on the sites and monuments. Currently being updated. ArqueoHispanica An online version of this new archaeological journal on Spain's antiquities. In Spanish.

2. HISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE SHIP - LECTURE NOTES
Europe which shifted the epicentre of european trade from most familiar to Germanand low countries trade first edition of Basil Greenhill's archaeology of the
http://cma.soton.ac.uk/HistShip/shlect83.htm
HISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE SHIP - LECTURE NOTES
83 Archaeological evidence. The Skuldelev ships provide a convenient starting point for the Norse merchant ship in the early middle ages. Other archaeological evidence for this period is scanty. Excavations into the medieval harbour at Bryggen, the old harbour of Bergen, in 1960 revealed the remains of ships timbers reused as revetments. Some of these were very substantial, suggesting a very large Nordic ship of approximately 30 feet in the beam by over 80 feet in length, dated to the mid thirteenth century. The Bryggen finds suggested that Nordic shipbuilders were capable of producing substantial ships which might have competed with the more commonly known cog. Other finds of merchant ships include the 8th century Askekarr ship from Gothenburg, the 1200 AD Asker ship from Oslo, a variety of Nordic type ships on the Polish coast at Charbrow, Danzig, Szcecin, and at Hedeby (Haithabu) on the German/Danish coast and in the Zuider Zee (cf Bass for references, expand on these). The best documented of the medieval Nordic ships is the Kalmar boat from Sweden. The site picture shows the cross beams and vertical knees which have been noted in earlier ships, together with internal stringers. The Kalmar boat is dated to the C13th and reconstructions suggest new features borrowed from other European generic types

3. Archaeologylinks
low countries Netherlands/Belgium/ Luxembourg Malta Mediterranean MesoAmerican Mexico North American Pompeii Regional archaeology Archives of european archaeology (AREA) Becoming
http://yalesecondary.sd34.bc.ca/Subject%20Weblinks/archaeologylinks.html
YALE SECONDARY SCHOOL LIBRARY WEBLINKS
ARCHAEOLOGY
Archaeology - General References
Archaeology - Internet Links I
Archaeology - Internet Links II
Archaeology - Internet Links III
Archaeology - Internet Links IV ...
Glossary
Archaeology - Countries/Regions
Asian
Baltic Region
Britain
Canada ...
Wales
Archaeology - Topics
Africa
American Indian
Ancient World
Ancient World - Archaeology ...
World Art Treasures
Anthropology and Archaeology Internet Resources
Aboriginal Connections
American Indian History and Related Issues
American Indian Research and Policy Institute
American Indian Resources ...
Visiting Strange and Exotic Places and Digging Holes in Them
MISCELANEOUS RELATED SITES
Academic Soccer
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World Development Report 1999/2000
(SEE ALSO: ANTHROPOLOGY
RETURN TO SUBJECT WEBLINKS INDEX RETURN TO YALE SECONDARY SCHOOL LIBRARY HOMEPAGE

4. European Archaeology
as a motivating force behind european development. By low countries Netherlands/Belgium/Luxembourg.archaeology of Agrarian Communities in the lower Meuse
http://www.archaeolink.com/european_archaeology.htm
Europe Home Britain now has its own page Albania Baltic Region Eastern Europe France ... Wales Albania Archaeology in Albania An excellent web page covering many aspects of Albanian archaeology. You will find links to specialty pages for a dozen research sites as well as news on late finds. You may spend some time here. - illustrated - From Welcome to Albania - http://www.geocities.com/albaland/archaeology/ Archaeology of Albania Series of articles about Albanian archaeological subjects - photos - http:// www.geocities.com/paris/louvre/6820/art.html Go.to/Albania; Archaeology of Albania A very brief overview of Albanian archaeology which more importantly has links to some interesting photos. - illustrated - several annoying popups - By Penar Musaraj - http://albaniagoto.virtualave.net/beauty/archaeology.html History Today: Archaeology in Albania after Kosovo... http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m1373/3_50/60081459/p1/article.jhtml Kosova Crisis Center - The Question of Illyrian-Albanian Continuity... For an interesting look at politics and archaeology, this is an excellent read. - By Dr. Aleksander Stipcevic -

5. Untitled
Toward a european archaeology Web the low countries. In the next few sections we will present a sample of these and other european resources, followed
http://odur.let.rug.nl/arge/Docs/archweb4.html
Toward a European Archaeology Web
By Martijn van Leusen, Sara Champion, Jonathan Lizee and Thomas Plunkett (University of Birmingham Field Archaeology Unit, University of Southampton Department of Adult Education, University of Connecticut Department of Anthropology)
Abstract
In the 1960s and 1970s, archaeologists used computers as engines for the construction and analysis of large data sets. This trend continued into the 1990s but has been supplemented by the use of the Internet for the sharing of pooled data sets and collaborative research projects. Recent development of the World Wide Web (WWW) protocol, with its user-friendly interfaces, offers the potential for construction of dynamic and interactive data sets, hypermedia reports, and artifact type catalogues. This development offers the potential to increase the effectiveness of collaborative works between users at remote locations - taking archaeologists into the Global Village at last -, and it also offers a cost effective means for distributing large data sets and high resolution images which would not be possible using traditional print media. In this paper, we will outline current uses of the World Wide Web and specific archaeological applications which have developed in the past year. These resources have the potential to enhance archaeological research through construction of large distributed data sets, visual databases, and interactive type catalogues. We will propose the setup of a European Archaeology Web (analogous to the ArchNet facility available from the University of Connecticut) which will bundle and promote initiatives currently emerging on institutional, regional, national, or international level in several European countries. Finally, we will outline the technical, financial, psychological and language barriers that such a network will have to overcome.

6. Journalspre20.html
INDEXES AND GUIDES TO WESTERN european PERIODICALS IN HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCEShttp//www.lib.uchicago.edu/~hierl/wess low countries ART and archaeology
http://www.library.wisc.edu/guides/europeanhistory/subj/journalspriortotwentieth
FINDING ARTICLES IN JOURNALS PRIOR TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
GENERAL AMERICAN EUROPEAN BRITISH ... SOCIOLOGY
GENERAL:
Balay, Robert. : Early periodical indexes : bibliographies and indexes of literature published in periodicals before 1900. Lanham, Md. : Scarecrow Press, 2000. Memorial Library Reference Stacks: : PN4801 B255 2000
ONLINE:
* = includes full-text of articles
*JSTOR includes some journals back as far as the 1880's. MAGAZINE STACKS (http://www.phil.uni-erlangen.de/~p1ges/zfhm/zfhm_na.html) Tables of contents of European (including British) historical journals, going back as far as 1827. PCI: Periodical Contents Index A very useful resource. Includes citations for articles in more than 3,500 social science and humanities journals published in North America, the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, and Germany, from the 18th Century through the 1990's. *PALMER'S FULL-TEXT ONLINE (Times of London) provides an index to the London Times, with individual index entries linked to a scanned image of the article from the original Times. Although the indexing covers October 1790 to December 1905, the full-text component spans only the years from 1800 to 1870 *PROQUEST HISTORICAL NEWSPAPERS; THE NEW YORK TIMES

7. RESCUE ARCHAEOLOGY
COMPROMISE OR OPPORTUNITY? it is clear that archaeology in many central and eastern european countries in particular will need to is regrettably still a relatively low level of public concern about the
http://www.muzarp.poznan.pl/archweb/archweb_eng/barf1.htm
RESCUE ARCHAEOLOGY: COMPROMISE OR OPPORTUNITY? Paul Barford
Introduction
The ephemeral traces of past human activity which form archaeological evidence are a valuable record which can be read in accordance with current archaeological practice to create a vivid picture of multifarious aspects of the lives of our predecessors, and as such form the only record of the story (the hopes, fears, aspirations, successes and failures) of countless generations of inhabitants of individual regions. They are the only way that we can recreate the lives of whole communities, societies and populations of forgotten generations stretching back in an unbroken chain to the first settlers of Europe after the retreat of the glaciers. These traces form their material, tangible, heritage, containing a multitude of messages that can be read into our times from it and forming a major element in the creation of the cultural identity of the peoples of Europe. All historical sources become historiography only by means of the selection and interpretation of the raw facts and their amalgamation into models of the past. With the increase of the quantity and quality of the information (brought about by the introduction of new techniques and research questions), previous models of the past are modified. While the number of known written records of many periods of the past is finite and can never be increased, the archaeological record is capable of revealing new ‘facts’ (at least while there is still enough well-preserved material in the soil to act as a resource). It is the specific characteristic of the archaeological evidence which gives it a specific character and makes archaeology such an interesting discipline.

8. European History: A Guide To Resources
The two main systems used to arrange the european history materials are the Cutter and the archaeology, CC, FF. Netherlands (low countries), DH, F465F4695.
http://www.library.wisc.edu/guides/europeanhistory/lib/brows3.htm
HISTORY: A BROWSING GUIDE TO MEMORIAL LIBRARY STACKS
This guide provides some suggestions for browsing the Memorial Library collection in the field of History. A number of classification systems have been used to organize the materials in the Memorial Library collection. The two main systems used to arrange the European history materials are the "Cutter" and the "Library of Congress" classification systems. Generally, the "Cutter" system was used to assign call numbers to materials added to the collection before 1970. There are approximately 214,000 titles in the "Cutter" collection. The Library of Congress system has been used to assign call numbers to materials added to the collection after 1970. The "Cutter" collection is located on Stack Level 4-South: oversized "Cutter" materials in the Basement.
Classification conversion table
Subject category
Library of Congress
Cutter
Religion Library of Congress - BL-BR Religion. Mythology. Rationalism.

9. World History
Itinerario Journal of european Expansion. Classical Mediterranean archaeology Sites(Sebastian Heath, University Erasmus of the low countries (online book by
http://www.emporia.edu/socsci/journal/world.htm
General World History EuroDocs: Primary Western European Documents (BYU) Western Civilization (many links gathered by Konnilyn Feig, Foothill College) Western European Specialists Section (Association of College and Research Libraries) Gateway to World History Historical Text Archive History Guide Footnotes to History (James Erwin's guide to lesser-known countries) Links for Students of History and the Social Sciences International Institute of Social History (the Netherlands) World Labor History Links (Yahoo!) The Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (Zurich) Central Europe Review (online articles and links) Country Studies: Area Handbook Series (Library of Congress) Religious Beliefs, Customs, and Practices Kulanu: Dispersed and Lost Jewish Communities The WWW Library Directory (over 6000 libraries) Ring Them: World Telephone Directories Online Resources for Canadian Heritage French Ministry of Culture (Mark Harden) WebMuseum: Bienvenue!

10. SCMRE Research Report FY 1993: Historical Archaeology
Historical archaeology. were compared to the lead isotope data from european ore sources. groupclosely matched ores from the low countries (Spanish Netherlands
http://www.si.edu/scmre/about/93histarch.htm
document.writeln(""); Home About Taking Care "Learning From Things" ... Contact Us ABOUT Partners Facilities/Resources Mission Programs ... Orientation Research Report FY 1993 Historical Archaeology Statistical Evaluation of the Lead Isotope Data on Geological Ore Samples from Western and Central Europe
Emile C. Joel, CAL
Edward Sayre, CAL Research Associate
Robert Vocke, Research Collaborator, NIST
Spanish and Spanish Colonial Ceramics
Emile C. Joel, CAL
Jacqueline S. Olin, CAL
Edward V. Sayre, CAL Research Associate
Robert Vocke, Research Collaborator, NIST
Spanish artifacts excavated in Spain and the New World were reexamined to determine their provenance in relation to the newly determined European ore sources. We decided to trace the origins of the lead used in these 16th century Spanish artifacts to test the validity of the European ore fields and to illustrate the effective use of the lead isotope database. Some of the lead data used in this study were from a previously published study conducted at our laboratory on glaze samples taken from majolica from Spain and from Spanish colonial sites in the New World. The original study successfully demonstrated that majolica produced in Mexico could be distinguished from those produced in Spain and are characteristic of the lead isotopic composition found in Mexican ores.

11. NUI Maynooth: Research & Graduate Studies > Grad Studies: Courses - Modern Histo
are european Union studies and european integration, social and cultural historyof the low countries, Spanish and Mr John Bradley The archaeology of Ireland
http://www.may.ie/research/graduate_studies/courses/modern_history.shtml
courses by dept research degrees taught degrees higher diplomas ... home page
Research Degrees
Select a Course: Anthropology Applied Social Sciences Biology Chemistry Classics Computer Science Economics Education English Experimental Physics French Geography German Mathematical Physics Mathematics Medieval Irish Modern History Music Nua Ghaeilge Philosophy Psychology Sociology RESEARCH INTERESTS OF ALL ACADEMIC STAFF Maynooth is one of the principal centres of research into the history of Ireland. The department offers direction of research in every period of Irish history, including local history. The Maynooth Libraries have substantial holdings of primary reference material for significant areas of Irish history: proximity to Dublin and the major national repositories such as the National Library and the National Archives makes Maynooth an ideal location for Irish historical research. Among the themes of research are Irish historic settlement, church and society in pre-Norman Ireland, political and religious reform in Tudor Ireland, social, economic and cultural change in the seventeenth century, political thought in the eighteenth century, poverty, emigration and medicine in the nineteenth century, and political mobilisation in modern Ireland. Irish and comparative urban history is a particular research strength, as is Irish migration overseas, especially to continental Europe in the early modern period.

12. National University Of Ireland, Maynooth Home Contact
archaeology of Ireland; urban archaeology; crannogs; the comparative purposes an interestin the low countries. field of History of european integration with a
http://www.may.ie/academic/history/staff.shtml

Home
Contact Courses General Information ... Staff Choose Department Adult Education Applied Social Studies Ancient Classics Anthropology Biology Chemistry Computer Science Economics Education Electronic Engineering English Experimental Physics French Geography German Local History Mathematics Mathematical Physics Modern History Modern Irish Music Philosophy Psychology Sociology Spanish
NUIM: Department of Modern History
Colin Barr, Ph.D. (Cantab) Postdoctoral Fellow Rhetoric 39 colbarr@hotmail.com John Bradley, M.A. (NUI) Senior Lecturer Rhetoric 41 john.bradley@may.ie The archaeology of Ireland; urban archaeology; crannogs; the medieval Irish town; death and burial in the Middle Ages. Richard Vincent Comerford M.A. Ph.D. (Dublin) Professor and Head of Department Rhetoric 53A vincent.comerford@may.ie Interests centre on political mobilisation and its social, economic and cultural bases. Particular concerns include the land question, language issues, ethnic division and identity formation; for comparative purposes an interest in the Low Countries. Terence Dooley Ph.D.

13. UWS - Staff CV And Research Interests - Hugh Leslie Aldous Dunthorne
23547; Entries on Dutch, european and colonial Studies; Dutch Crossing a journalof low countries Studies; History and archaeology Review; Studies in Newspaper
http://www.swan.ac.uk/uws/research/staff_cv/History/hdunthorne.htm
Hugh Leslie Aldous Dunthorne
Department of History
University of Wales Swansea
Singleton Park
Swansea
UK
01792 205678 ext. 4136
h.l.a.dunthorne@swansea.ac.uk
Short C.V. Present Position Senior Lecturer in History Other Current Posts and Committee Memberships
  • M.A. Co-ordinator Socrates Exchange Co-ordinator Planning Committee for Fifteenth Anglo-Dutch Conference of Historians
Previous Posts and Committee Memberships
  • Tutor in History, London School of Economics, 1969-70 Lecturer in History, University of Wales Swansea, 1971-98 Visiting Research Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Edinburgh, 1981 Fulbright Exchange Professor, West Chester University of Pennsylvania, 1987-88 British Academy Research Fellow, Newberry Library, Chicago, 1998 Committee of Swansea Association of University Teachers, 1990-94, Secretary 1992-94 History Department Staff-Student Consultative Committee, Chair 1997-98
Education
  • University of Edinburgh: M.A., 2/i, 1967

14. Current Seminars
bulletlink, Seminar in Byzantine Art and archaeology. bulletlink, Comparative Historyof the Middle Ages France, England, the low countries. Early Modern european.
http://www.history.ox.ac.uk/seminars/tt2001/

15. Rowan Leaf Celtic Books Bronze Age Archaeology
the 1st and 2nd Millennium (New Studies in archaeology). of continuity and changein european societies, c NorthEastern France, and the low countries during the
http://www.summerlands.com/marketplace/Bookstore2/amazon_store/archaeology/bronz
Books Related to "Bronze" Archaeology Back to Archaeology Main Page
Author Book Title Form Date J. Taylor Bronze Age Goldwork of the British Isles Hard Ian H. Longworth Collared Urns of the Bronze Age in Great Britain and Ireland Hard Francis Pryor English Heritage Book of Flag Fen : Prehistoric Fenland Centre Paper Kristian Kristiansen Europe Before History : The European World in the 1st and 2nd Millennium (New Studies in Archaeology) Hard A.F. Harding The Mycenaeans and Europe Hard Richard Bradley The Significance of Monuments : On the Shaping of Human Experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe Hard Richard Bradley The Significance of Monuments : On the Shaping of Human Experience in Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe Paper D. Blair Gibson, Michael N. Geselowitz (Editor) Tribe and Polity in Late Prehistoric Europe : Demography, Production, and Exchange in the Evolution of Complex Social Systems Hard Colin Burgess Age of Stonehenge Astronomy and society in Britain during the period 4000-1500 B.C Peter Karl Schmidt The axes of Scotland and northern England Chris Musson The Breiddin hillfort : a later prehistoric settlement in the Welsh Marches John Waddell The Bronze Age burials of Ireland Trevor G. Cowie

16. Art History (AH)
210 The Art and archaeology of Ancient Egypt The art and architecture of the low countries,Germany, France european painting, sculpture, and architecture of the
http://www.uic.edu/ucat/courses/ahxxucat.html
Art History (AH)
The information below lists undergraduate courses approved in this subject area effective Summer and Fall, 2003 . Not all courses will necessarily be offered these terms. Please consult the Timetable for a listing of courses offered for a specific term. Introduction to Art and Art History.
3 Hours.
Forms, meanings, and purposes of art. Discussion of techniques, styles, and content as well as historical and social contexts, in various media and cultures. Art History I.
4 Hours.
Survey of world art and architecture from prehistoric times to the end of the Middle Ages. Art History II.
4 Hours.
Survey of world art and architecture from the Renaissance to the present. History of Chicago Architecture.
3 Hours.
Survey of Chicago's architecture and built environment from 1803 to the present. Trends in International Contemporary Art since 1960.
3 Hours.
Surveys international trends in art since 1960. Emphasis is on movements, new media, intermedia, criticism and theory. Prerequisite: Consent of the instructor or Major in Studio Arts. Theories and Methods in Art History.

17. Bibliography Of European Textiles, 1100-1750
The Roman Horizontal Loom,' The American Journal of archaeology, 2nd ser., 91 andJohn Munro, ed., Textiles of the low countries in european Economic History
http://www.economics.utoronto.ca/munro5/ETextBib.htm
Professor John H. Munro
Department of Economics
University of Toronto
150 St. George Street
Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G7
CANADA
e-mail: john.munro@utoronto.ca
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF EUROPEAN TEXTILES, 1100 - 1750
A The Technology of Textile Manufacturing: from Late Roman to Early Modern Times
(Paris, 1780).
* 2. William Partridge, A Practical Treatise on Dying [sic] of Woollen, Cotton, and Skein Silk (New York, 1823; reissued and edited, with technical notes by J. de L. Mann and K.G. Ponting, Pasold Research Fund, Wilts., 1973).
3. William Beck, The Draper's Dictionary: A Manual of Textile Fabrics, Their History and Applications (London, 1882).
4. J.W. Radcliffe, The Manufacture of Woollen and Worsted Yarns (Manchester and London, 1913). * 6. . Abbott P. Usher, A History of Mechanical Inventions (1929; revised edn. Cambridge, Mass. 1954), chapter XI: 'Machinery of the Textile Industries: 100-1800 A.D.', pp. 304-331. 7. E. Kilburn Scott, 'Early Cloth Fulling and Its Machinery,' the Newcomen Society Transactions * 8. E.M. Carus-Wilson, 'An Industrial Revolution of the Thirteenth Century,'

18. World Wide Web Virtual Library - Belgian History Index - Reference
by (young) scholars of history, art history, philosophy and archaeology. . to thecultural heritage of the low countries, situated in a wider european context
http://vlib.iue.it/hist-belgium/reference.html

WWW VL Search Facility

World Wide Web Virtual Library central catalogue

WWW VL Main History Index and
Sites Maintainers ...
EUI Library
and Web Sites. The Belgian History Index provides Internet resources on the History of Belgium, whether from Belgium and abroad, in Dutch and other languages. If the description of the resources are in Dutch, this can be taken as indicating that no English equivalent of the pages is available. The documents and materials gathered on this site should not be taken to reflect the view of the editor.
Belgian History Index : Reference
INDEX
REFERENCE GEOGRAPHICAL CHRONOLOGICAL ... OTHER Archives
  • Archief-, bibliotheek- en documentatiewezen in Vlaanderen Vlaamse Vereniging voor Bibliotheek-, Archief- en Documentatiewezen (VVBAD). General State Archives (ARA-AGR) Federal scientific institution responsible for conservation and administration of Belgian archival inheritance. Its website contains information regarding mission statement, activities, consultation, publications, search instruments etc. The ARA's site also includes info on departmental archives. [DUTCH / FRENCH ONLY] Het archief van de Belgische Senaat Les archives du Sénat de Belgique "Les archives du Sénat et celles de la Chambre des représentants ne sont pas soumises à la loi belge générale sur les archives. Chaque Chambre gère ses propres archives." Histoire. Fonds détenus. Publications officielles et publications des sources. Cliquez sur 'Documentation'.

19. Staff - Faculty Of Archaeology Leiden
is currently writing an overview on the prehistory of the low countries. of ArcheoNet,the Thematic Network for archaeology of the european SOCRATES program
http://archweb.leidenuniv.nl/fa/english/staff.html
Faculty of Archaeology Staff Back Search for Staff This page is still under construction
E-mails send to Secretary@Arch.Leidenuniv.nl will be forwarded to members of the staff. L.P. Louwe Kooijmans
Leendert Pieter Louwe Kooijmans
, dean of the faculty, director of the National School for Archaeological Research and professor of prehistoric archaeology. He was born in Arnhem, Netherlands, in 1940. Studied Fysical Geography at Utrecht, and worked from 1966 to 1982 as the curator of the National Museum of Antiquities at Leiden. In 1974 he recieved his Ph.D. for a thesis on the relation between sea-level change and the prehistoric occupation of the western parts of the Netherlands. His research focuses on the Neolithic in general, and the transition of hunter/gatherer communities to farming in north-west Europe. With other members of the staff he is currently writing an overview on the prehistory of the Low Countries
J. Bintliff
John Bintliff

H.Kamermans
Hans Kamermans
Hans Kamermans is lecturer in Leiden University, in the Netherlands. He was born in 1949 in Amsterdam, studied ecological prehistory and physical geography in Amsterdam and wrote his PhD thesis on the use of land evaluation (a form of predictive modelling) in archaeology. In Leiden he teaches archaeological methods and techniques and various courses in computer applications in archaeology. His research is in the field of computer applications in archaeology (predictive modelling, GIS, the use of computers in the field, sampling). In the 1980th, he co-directed the Agro Pontino survey in Italy and he was recently involved in excavations in Geleen (the Netherlands), Boxgrove (England) and in the Vézère valley (France). He is secretary of the steering committee of

20. Vandemoortel
Chasing Ships on Dry Land Nautical archaeology in the low countries, Friends of Boundariesin Medieval Europe, Sixteenth Annual european Studies Symposium
http://web.utk.edu/~classics/faculty/vandemoortel.html
ALEYDIS VAN DE MOORTEL Assistant Professor
Department of Classics
1104 McClung Tower
University of Tennessee
Knoxville, TN 37996-0413 USA
Phone (865) 974-8279
Fax (865) 974-7173
avdm@utk.edu
http://web.utk.edu/~avdm

ACADEMIC HISTORY "Candidaat" (Classics), Sint Ignatius, Antwerp (Belgium), 1978
M.A. (Classics), Catholic University of Leuven (Belgium), 1981 M.A. (Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology), Bryn Mawr College, 1989 Ph.D. (Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology), Bryn Mawr College, 1997 Dissertation, ""The Transition from the Protopalatial to the Neopalatial Society in South-Central Crete." Director Prof. James C. Wright Regular and student associate member, American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1990-94 Senior associate member, American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1999-2002 EMPLOYMENT Assistant Professor, Dept. of Classics, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 2002- Field trip director, College-Year-in-Athens, 1992, 2000-2001 Assistant Professor of Classics, Dept. of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Seattle Pacific University, 1998-99 Post-doctoral researcher, Centre for Maritime Archaeology, Roskilde, Denmark, 1997-2001

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