Hamon, Caroline (Dr.)

Caroline Hamon is a permanent researcher at the CNRS (UMR 8215 Trajectoires, France). She is specialized in the economies and subsistence strategies of the period spanning from the Neolithic to the Early Bronze age. Through a multidisciplinary approach (technology, use-wear analysis, anthropology of techniques), her work focuses on the economic and symbolic functions of querns and macrolithic tools in the dietary practices, craft production and exploitation of mineral resources. She has worked in different areas, from north-western Europe, to the western Mediterranean and the Caucasus.

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Harbeck, Michaela (Dr.)

Michaela Harbeck is curator at the SNSB, State Collection for Anthropology in Munich. She received her PhD and postdoctoral lecture qualification (Habilitation) in Biological Anthropology at the Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich. There she was working as an assistant professor before changing to her current position. She is co-author of two standard textbook for biological anthropology in German language and of many scientific articles dealing with all areas of Osteolarchaeology. The focus of her research, however, is on migration and living conditions in (early-) medieval times.

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Harding, Anthony (Prof. dr.)

Anthony Harding is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Exeter, UK, and an authority on the European Bronze Age. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and Chairman of Trustees of the journal Antiquity. From 2003-2009 he was President of the European Association of Archaeologists.

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Harris, Susanna (Dr.)

Dr. Susanna Harris is Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Glasgow. Her research focus lies on prehistoric Europe and the central Mediterranean with expertise in organic artefacts and representational art. She studies textiles, leather and basketry of the Neolithic to Bronze Age and the role of these materials in dress and identity investigated through people represented in stone, metal or ceramics.

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Haug, Annette (Prof. dr.)

Institute of Classical Studies / Classical Archaeology, CAU Kiel (present). Studies of Classical Archaeology, Art History and Prehistory in Heidelberg and Paris, binational PhD 2003, Habilitation Leipzig 2009, LMU München Heisenberg Fellow. Since 2012, Professor of Classical Archaeology at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel. PI of the ERC Consolidator Grant “Decorative Principles in Late Republican and Early Imperial Italy” 2016-2022. Former co-speaker and actual PI of the Cluster of Excellence ROOTS.

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Hausmair, Barbara (Dr.)

Barbara Hausmair obtained her PhD in Pre- and Protohistorical Archaeology from the University Vienna and conducted research visits at the Universities of Reading and Cambridge. As research associate at the University of Vienna from 2008 to 2014, she was involved in various archaeological projects.

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Heit, Ilia (Dr.)

Ilia Heit studied Prehistoric Archaeology, Geology, and Slavic Philology at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany and received his PhD in Near Eastern Archaeology at the Freie Universität Berlin. His current research focuses on Neolithic and Chalcolithic communities in Central Asia and South Caucasus as well as theories and methods of Soviet archaeology. He is author of Dem Wandel auf der Spur. Bauen und Wohnen in Monjukli Depe und Umgebung, Turkmenistan.

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Hamon, Caroline (Dr.)

Caroline Hamon is a permanent researcher at the CNRS (UMR 8215 Trajectoires, France). She is specialized in the economies and subsistence strategies of the period spanning from the Neolithic to the Early Bronze age. Through a multidisciplinary approach (technology, use-wear analysis, anthropology of techniques), her work focuses on the economic and symbolic functions of querns and macrolithic tools in the dietary practices, craft production and exploitation of mineral resources. She has worked in different areas, from north-western Europe, to the western Mediterranean and the Caucasus.

read more

Harbeck, Michaela (Dr.)

Michaela Harbeck is curator at the SNSB, State Collection for Anthropology in Munich. She received her PhD and postdoctoral lecture qualification (Habilitation) in Biological Anthropology at the Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich. There she was working as an assistant professor before changing to her current position. She is co-author of two standard textbook for biological anthropology in German language and of many scientific articles dealing with all areas of Osteolarchaeology. The focus of her research, however, is on migration and living conditions in (early-) medieval times.

read more

Harding, Anthony (Prof. dr.)

Anthony Harding is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Exeter, UK, and an authority on the European Bronze Age. He is a Fellow of the British Academy and Chairman of Trustees of the journal Antiquity. From 2003-2009 he was President of the European Association of Archaeologists.

read more

Harris, Susanna (Dr.)

Dr. Susanna Harris is Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Glasgow. Her research focus lies on prehistoric Europe and the central Mediterranean with expertise in organic artefacts and representational art. She studies textiles, leather and basketry of the Neolithic to Bronze Age and the role of these materials in dress and identity investigated through people represented in stone, metal or ceramics.

read more

Haug, Annette (Prof. dr.)

Institute of Classical Studies / Classical Archaeology, CAU Kiel (present). Studies of Classical Archaeology, Art History and Prehistory in Heidelberg and Paris, binational PhD 2003, Habilitation Leipzig 2009, LMU München Heisenberg Fellow. Since 2012, Professor of Classical Archaeology at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel. PI of the ERC Consolidator Grant “Decorative Principles in Late Republican and Early Imperial Italy” 2016-2022. Former co-speaker and actual PI of the Cluster of Excellence ROOTS.

read more

Hausmair, Barbara (Dr.)

Barbara Hausmair obtained her PhD in Pre- and Protohistorical Archaeology from the University Vienna and conducted research visits at the Universities of Reading and Cambridge. As research associate at the University of Vienna from 2008 to 2014, she was involved in various archaeological projects.

read more

Heit, Ilia (Dr.)

Ilia Heit studied Prehistoric Archaeology, Geology, and Slavic Philology at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany and received his PhD in Near Eastern Archaeology at the Freie Universität Berlin. His current research focuses on Neolithic and Chalcolithic communities in Central Asia and South Caucasus as well as theories and methods of Soviet archaeology. He is author of Dem Wandel auf der Spur. Bauen und Wohnen in Monjukli Depe und Umgebung, Turkmenistan.

read more




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