Nikulka, Frank (Prof. dr.)

Frank Nikulka is currently Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Hamburg. His main research interests include the Bronze and Iron Ages of Europe, as well as the Slavic period, the economic and social implications of metallurgy, variability in burial rituals and cultural contacts throughout Iron Age Europe.

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Nishiaki, Yoshihiro (Prof dr.)

Yoshihiro Nishiaki, born in 1961, received his BA and MA from the University of Tokyo, and Ph.D. from University College London. He has been a full professor of prehistoric archaeology at the University of Tokyo since 2006 and Director of the University of Tokyo Museum since 2020. His major research interest is concerned with the prehistory of West and Central Asia, particularly the origins and development of farming socio-economy and the replacement of Neanderthals by anatomically modern humans in those regions.

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Norde, Eric (Drs.)

Eric Norde studied classical archaeology at Leiden University. During his study, he specialised in native Roman shipbuilding traditions. Since 2003 he has been active within the so-called Malta-archaeology. After working for the municipality of Delft, Grontmij and ACVU-hbs, Since 2010 he has worked for RAAP as senior project leader and excavation coordinator for the mid-Dutch region. His specialty is conducting large scale settlement excavations from the Bronze Age onwards in the Dutch River area as well as the Pleistocene sandy regions in the eastern part of the Netherlands. He also works as a policy-maker and consultant.

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Ntinou, Maria (Dr.)

Maria Ntinou is Assistant Professor at the Department of History and Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece. Her field of expertise is Anthracology (the analysis and interpretation of wood charcoal macro-remains). She participates in international research projects in Greece and Cyprus. Her research interests are prehistory, archaeobotany, vegetation history, woodland management by the prehistoric societies and the formation of the anthropogenic landscapes.

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Nyirubugara, Olivier (Dr.)

Dr. Olivier Nyirubugara is lecturer in Journalism, Media Theory, and International Communication Management at The Hague University of Applied Sciences. Between 2012 and 2016 he lectured New Media and Online Journalism at Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication (Erasmus University Rotterdam). His main areas of publication include cultural heritage, cultural memory, history education, and digital media.

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Nyland, Astrid J. (Dr.)

Astrid J. Nyland is Associate Professor at the Museum of Archaeology, University of Stavanger, Norway. In her research she explores aspects of life in the Mesolithic and Neolithic, like how societies handled crisis, how one expressed or anchored social affinity through lithics and lithic raw materials, and ways of past (and present) knowledge transmission and storytelling. Nyland also has a background in field archaeology and is the administrative project coordinator for the archaeological excavations at her museum.

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Nørlund Christensen, Asger (Dr.)

Asger Nørlund Christensen is a Danish historian, who did his master at Aarhus University in 2013 and successfully defended his Ph.D. dissertation in September 2019 at the University of Southern Denmark. In his early carrier he sailed as a deckhand and later as mate and skipper on several traditional sailing ships, just as he has worked with the restoration of traditional craft.

read more

Nikulka, Frank (Prof. dr.)

Frank Nikulka is currently Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology at the University of Hamburg. His main research interests include the Bronze and Iron Ages of Europe, as well as the Slavic period, the economic and social implications of metallurgy, variability in burial rituals and cultural contacts throughout Iron Age Europe.

read more

Nishiaki, Yoshihiro (Prof dr.)

Yoshihiro Nishiaki, born in 1961, received his BA and MA from the University of Tokyo, and Ph.D. from University College London. He has been a full professor of prehistoric archaeology at the University of Tokyo since 2006 and Director of the University of Tokyo Museum since 2020. His major research interest is concerned with the prehistory of West and Central Asia, particularly the origins and development of farming socio-economy and the replacement of Neanderthals by anatomically modern humans in those regions.

read more

Norde, Eric (Drs.)

Eric Norde studied classical archaeology at Leiden University. During his study, he specialised in native Roman shipbuilding traditions. Since 2003 he has been active within the so-called Malta-archaeology. After working for the municipality of Delft, Grontmij and ACVU-hbs, Since 2010 he has worked for RAAP as senior project leader and excavation coordinator for the mid-Dutch region. His specialty is conducting large scale settlement excavations from the Bronze Age onwards in the Dutch River area as well as the Pleistocene sandy regions in the eastern part of the Netherlands. He also works as a policy-maker and consultant.

read more

Ntinou, Maria (Dr.)

Maria Ntinou is Assistant Professor at the Department of History and Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece. Her field of expertise is Anthracology (the analysis and interpretation of wood charcoal macro-remains). She participates in international research projects in Greece and Cyprus. Her research interests are prehistory, archaeobotany, vegetation history, woodland management by the prehistoric societies and the formation of the anthropogenic landscapes.

read more

Nyirubugara, Olivier (Dr.)

Dr. Olivier Nyirubugara is lecturer in Journalism, Media Theory, and International Communication Management at The Hague University of Applied Sciences. Between 2012 and 2016 he lectured New Media and Online Journalism at Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication (Erasmus University Rotterdam). His main areas of publication include cultural heritage, cultural memory, history education, and digital media.

read more

Nyland, Astrid J. (Dr.)

Astrid J. Nyland is Associate Professor at the Museum of Archaeology, University of Stavanger, Norway. In her research she explores aspects of life in the Mesolithic and Neolithic, like how societies handled crisis, how one expressed or anchored social affinity through lithics and lithic raw materials, and ways of past (and present) knowledge transmission and storytelling. Nyland also has a background in field archaeology and is the administrative project coordinator for the archaeological excavations at her museum.

read more

Nørlund Christensen, Asger (Dr.)

Asger Nørlund Christensen is a Danish historian, who did his master at Aarhus University in 2013 and successfully defended his Ph.D. dissertation in September 2019 at the University of Southern Denmark. In his early carrier he sailed as a deckhand and later as mate and skipper on several traditional sailing ships, just as he has worked with the restoration of traditional craft.

read more




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