Carli, Amalia E.M. (Dr.)

Amalia E. M. Carli was born in Argentina but lives in Norway where she graduated as a psychologist in 1986 and is a member of the Norwegian Psychological Association and the Institutt for Psykoterapi. She has a clinical specialization in children and youth psychology and specialization in intensive psychotherapy with adults. Amalia received her PhD in Psychology from the University Ramon Llull, Barcelona, Spain in 2019.

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Carlin, Neil (Dr.)

Neil Carlin is a lecturer in the School of Archaeology at University College Dublin. His research concentrates on the Neolithic and Bronze Age of Ireland and Britain in their European contexts. Much of this is focused on how people construct and negotiate their social relationships, identities and worldview through their everyday material engagement with their world, including the routine production, use and disposal of objects in specific places.

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Carreau, Lucie

Lucie Carreau is a researcher based at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (MAA), University of Cambridge. Educated at the École du Louvre (Paris) and Sainsbury Research Unit (Norwich), her work focuses on the history of collecting and collections in the19th century and early 20th century and the role of objects in mediating relationships between Pacific Islanders and European visitors.

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Cecalupo, Chiara (Dr.)

Chiara Cecalupo is CONEX-Plus-Marie Curie Fellow at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. She received her PhD in Museology and History of Early Christian Archaeology at the Pontificio Istituto di Archeologia Cristiana in Rome. As a researcher, she collaborated with several universities and museums in Italy, Malta, Spain and other states. Her main research focus is on the rediscovery of early-Christian catacombs in the Mediterranean basin. She has a very strong record of publication in history of archaeology, antiquarian studies and reception of antiquities from the 16th to the 19th century.

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Chan, Ben (Dr.)

Ben Chan is a prehistoric archaeologist and a lithics analyst focusing on all forms of techno-typological analyses and use-wear analysis. He has a particular interest in settlement archaeology and the archaeology of craft and subsistence practices. Ben has worked extensively on the Neolithic landscapes of Stonehenge, Avebury, and Orkney. He currently works at the University of Bristol having previously held a Marie Curie Intra-European fellowship at Leiden University.

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Chapman, John (Prof. (em.) dr.)

John Chapman is an Emeritus Professor of European Prehistory at Durham University, where he worked for over 20 years, after moving from the Department of Archaeology of the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (1980 – 1996). He was the first Editor of the European Journal of Archaeology for the European Association of Archaeologists and Vice-President of the Prehistoric Society (UK).

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Cheben, Ivan

Ivan Cheben is a Researcher at the Archaeological Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Nitra. His main research interests are material culture studies and settlement patterns of Neolithic and Copper Age periods in Central Europe. He has an extensive experience in archaeological fieldwork in Slovakia, and served as the head of rescue excavations in SW Slovakia for many years. Since 2012 he is head of the Vráble fieldwork project.

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Carli, Amalia E.M. (Dr.)

Amalia E. M. Carli was born in Argentina but lives in Norway where she graduated as a psychologist in 1986 and is a member of the Norwegian Psychological Association and the Institutt for Psykoterapi. She has a clinical specialization in children and youth psychology and specialization in intensive psychotherapy with adults. Amalia received her PhD in Psychology from the University Ramon Llull, Barcelona, Spain in 2019.

read more

Carlin, Neil (Dr.)

Neil Carlin is a lecturer in the School of Archaeology at University College Dublin. His research concentrates on the Neolithic and Bronze Age of Ireland and Britain in their European contexts. Much of this is focused on how people construct and negotiate their social relationships, identities and worldview through their everyday material engagement with their world, including the routine production, use and disposal of objects in specific places.

read more

Carreau, Lucie

Lucie Carreau is a researcher based at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (MAA), University of Cambridge. Educated at the École du Louvre (Paris) and Sainsbury Research Unit (Norwich), her work focuses on the history of collecting and collections in the19th century and early 20th century and the role of objects in mediating relationships between Pacific Islanders and European visitors.

read more

Cecalupo, Chiara (Dr.)

Chiara Cecalupo is CONEX-Plus-Marie Curie Fellow at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. She received her PhD in Museology and History of Early Christian Archaeology at the Pontificio Istituto di Archeologia Cristiana in Rome. As a researcher, she collaborated with several universities and museums in Italy, Malta, Spain and other states. Her main research focus is on the rediscovery of early-Christian catacombs in the Mediterranean basin. She has a very strong record of publication in history of archaeology, antiquarian studies and reception of antiquities from the 16th to the 19th century.

read more

Chan, Ben (Dr.)

Ben Chan is a prehistoric archaeologist and a lithics analyst focusing on all forms of techno-typological analyses and use-wear analysis. He has a particular interest in settlement archaeology and the archaeology of craft and subsistence practices. Ben has worked extensively on the Neolithic landscapes of Stonehenge, Avebury, and Orkney. He currently works at the University of Bristol having previously held a Marie Curie Intra-European fellowship at Leiden University.

read more

Chapman, John (Prof. (em.) dr.)

John Chapman is an Emeritus Professor of European Prehistory at Durham University, where he worked for over 20 years, after moving from the Department of Archaeology of the University of Newcastle upon Tyne (1980 – 1996). He was the first Editor of the European Journal of Archaeology for the European Association of Archaeologists and Vice-President of the Prehistoric Society (UK).

read more

Cheben, Ivan

Ivan Cheben is a Researcher at the Archaeological Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Nitra. His main research interests are material culture studies and settlement patterns of Neolithic and Copper Age periods in Central Europe. He has an extensive experience in archaeological fieldwork in Slovakia, and served as the head of rescue excavations in SW Slovakia for many years. Since 2012 he is head of the Vráble fieldwork project.

read more




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