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List of Contributors

in Burial and Memorial in Late Antiquity
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  • Vollständiger Text

List of Contributors

Javier Arce

is an Emeritus Professor of Roman Archaeology at the University of Lille (France). He is currently working on a book on Constantius II.

Francesca Bigi

Ph.D. (2008), works for the Sovrintendenza Capitolina ai Beni Culturali. She is currently responsible for the architectural decoration of the former Antiquarium del Celio collection and of the Mausoleum of Augustus.

Barbara Borg

holds the Chair in Classical Archaeology at the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa. She has published widely on Roman funerary culture and is PI of the ERC-funded project The INscribed City: Urban Structures and Interaction in Imperial ROME (101054143 IN-ROME)

Rhea Brettell

has a Ph.D. (2016) in Archaeological Sciences. Her specialism is the use of instrumental methods, primarily organic residue analysis, to enhance our understanding of past mortuary practices.

Alexandra Chavarría Arnau

is Full Professor of Medieval Archaeology at the University of Padua (Italy) has developed research and published in different subjects related to the period between the end of the Roman World and the Late Middle Ages such as rural settlement, cemeteries and churches.

Judit Ciurana Prast

Ph.D. (2011), works as a professional archaeologist in southern Catalonia. She has been involved in various projects conducting field surveys and post-excavation analysis.

Chloe Clark

is a Ph.D. student at King’s College London. Her research focuses on the role and experience of colour in ancient death and burial.

Sam Cohen

is an Associate Professor at Sonoma State University, with research interests in the evolution of the concept of heresy, the bishops of Rome, sacred topography, polemic and rhetoric, migration, as well as the place of minority and non-conforming peoples in late antique Christian society.

Carl Heron

is Director of Scientific Research at the British Museum. Prior to this he was Professor of Archaeological Sciences at the University of Bradford with interests in molecular and isotopic investigation of archaeological materials.

Mark Johnson

Ph.D. (1986), is Professor Emeritus at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. His most recent books are San Vitale in Ravenna and Octagonal Churches in Late Antiquity and a study connected with his late wife’s ancestors, The Patriots of Penne in the Nineteenth Century.

Leonardo Lamanna

Ph.D. (2018), is an archaeologist specialized in the study of ancient human remains. He is currently employed as an Archaeological officer at the Soprintendenza of Mantua (Ministry of Culture – Italy).

Luke Lavan

Ph.D. (2001), is a Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Kent. He is the series editor of Late Antique Archaeology, has directed excavation and survey at Ostia, and author of Public Space in the Late Antique City (2020).

Zsolt Magyar

is an independent researcher. He has published papers on late antique mausolea, imperial cult, Roman Sopianae (Pécs, Hungary), and the archaeology of Hungary.

Maurizio Marinato

is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Padua, where he obtained his Ph.D. (Doctor Europaeus). His scientific interests include medieval archaeology and bioarchaeology, in particular the study of cemetery contexts.

William Martin

Ph.D. (2005), is an Associate Professor in Organic Chemistry at the University of Bradford. His interests are in the synthesis and mass spectrometry of small molecules of archaeological significance.

Nick Mishkovsky

is a professional collections manager in New York City, with research interests in late antique archaeology, and specifically on ancient spolia.

Julia Nikolaus

Ph.D. (2017), is a Senior Research Fellow at the Maritime Endangered Archaeology Project (MarEA) at Ulster University. Her research focuses on heritage management and protection in the MENA region, as well as funerary landscapes of North Africa.

José Miguel Noguera Celdrán

Ph.D. (1993), is a Professor in Archaeology at the University of Murcia. He is the series editor of Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani-Spain, director of Archivo Español de Arqueología, scientific director of the archaeological project of Molinete (Cartegena) and author of some books and papers on Late Antique funerary architecture in Hispania.

Efthymios Rizos

Ph.D. (2011) has been a Research Fellow at Koç University, the Netherlands Institute in Turkey and the Cult of Saints research project at the University of Oxford, with research interests focusing on the late antique urbanism and cultural history of the Balkans, Greece and Anatolia.

Eline M. J. Schotsmans

Ph.D., is a Research Fellow at the University of Wollongong (Australia). Her research lies at the interface between archaeology, anthropology and forensic science with a focus on taphonomy, funerary treatment and preservation practices to provide insights in past social organisation. Eline edited The Routledge Handbook of Archaeothanatology (2022).

Christopher Sparey-Green

(BA, MCIfA) is an archaeologist and Honorary Research Fellow at University of Kent, excavator of the Late Antique Cemetery at Poundbury, Dorchester, Dorset.

Ben Stern

Ph.D. (1996), is a Lecturer in Archaeological Science at the University of Bradford. Research interests include organic residue analysis.

Ignazio Tantillo

is Professor of Roman History at the University of Naples “L’Orientale”. He is the author of several studies on the late antique period, ranging from municipal to imperial court history.

Douglas Underwood

Ph.D. (2015), is an independent scholar. He researches the cities of the late antique west, focusing especially on public monuments and memory.

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Burial and Memorial in Late Antiquity

Volume 1: Thematic Perspectives

Reihe:  Late Antique Archaeology, Band: 13/1
Cover Burial and Memorial in Late Antiquity
ISBN:
9789004687981
Verleger:
BRILL
Print-Publikationsdatum:
18 Sep 2024
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Frontispiece
Copyright Page
Acknowledgements
List of Contributors
Burial and Memorial in Late Antiquity
Bioarchaeology
Recent Bioarchaeological Research on Early Medieval Cemeteries in Italy
Treatment of the Body
“To Make the Unseen Seen”: Organic Residue Analysis of Late Roman Grave Deposits
The Colour of Death: Colour Symbolism and Burial in Roman Britain
Funeral Processions in Late Antiquity
Mausolea
Late Roman ‘Mausolea’ in Hispania
Mausolea in North-West Europe: the Transition from the Roman to Late Antique Periods
Late Roman Mausolea in Pannonia
Mausolea in Late Antique Italy
Changing Funerary Landscapes in Late Antiquity: Mausolea in North Africa
Funerary Landscapes
Funerary Landscapes in Catalonia (3rd–6th c. AD)
The Late Antique Funerary Landscape of Rome: 3rd to 4th c. AD
Burying the Saints Next to the Common Dead: the Burial Habits of the Christian Elite in the 4th c. and the First Translations of Relics
Topography and Ideology: Contested Episcopal Elections and Suburban Cemeteries in Late Antique Rome
Other Memorials: Statue Monuments
The Archaeology of Late Antique Statue Monuments
The Many Lives of the Statue Bases of Lepcis Magna
Tombs and Spolia in City Walls
Memorial and Oblivion in Late Antiquity: the Testimony of Spolia in City Walls
The Destruction, Preservation, and Adaptive Reuse of Funerary Monuments within Urban Fortifications in Late Antiquity: the West
The Destruction, Preservation, and Adaptive Reuse of Funerary Monuments in Urban Fortifications in Late Antiquity: the East
Spolia in Late Antique City Walls
Spolia in Late Antique City Walls
Spolia and Civic Memory
Urban Landscapes from Architectural Reuse: Spolia, Chronology and Civic Memory in Late Antique Ephesus
Back Matter
Abstracts in French

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