Hafner, Albert (Prof. Dr.)
Albert Hafner holds a full professorship in Prehistoric Archaeology and is member of the Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research (OCCR) at the University of Bern, Switzerland. His research interests include Holocene human-environment relationships, social developments and elites, burial rites, underwater archaeology and alpine archaeology. Main ongoing research projects funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation and the European Research Council are related to lake-side settlements in the Alpine Space and the Balkans.
Hahn-Weishaupt, Andrea
Andrea Hahn-Weishaupt studied prehistoric archaeology and human anthropology in Freiburg i.Br. and Tübingen. Since 1997, she has been running a successful archaeological excavation company in tandem with her husband, and in the interim, her daughter joined them as well. The company specialises in an extensive spectrum of archaeological pursuits, encompassing historical cemeteries, medieval village and town centres, prehistoric sites, and tangible remnants of the Nazi terror regime. Since 1998, she has been leading large-scale field inspections in the Uckermark, Brandenburg, as part of a job creation measure. In 2010, Andrea Hahn-Weishaupt joined the Archäologische Gesellschaft in Berlin und Brandenburg as a board member.
Halbertsma, Ruurd Binnert (Prof. Dr.)
Ruurd Binnert Halbertsma (1958) is curator in the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, professor at the Faculty of Archaeology of Leiden University and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London.
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.
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.
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.
Harding, D. W. (Prof. (em.) Dr.)
Dennis Harding graduated from the University of Oxford, where he also gained his doctorate in archaeology under the supervision of Professor Christopher Hawkes. For thirty years he was Abercromby Professor of Archaeology in the University of Edinburgh, 1977-2007, serving terms as Dean of Arts and subsequently as Vice-Principal of the University. He had previously been Lecturer in Celtic Archaeology at the University of Durham, where he had taken up flying for archaeological air photography, principally operating in the Anglo-Scottish borders and in the Northern and Western Isles. His aerial survey was complemented by excavation, notably in the Western Isles, and the results of his research were included in his synthesis The Iron Age in Northern Britain (2004; second edition 2017).
Hafner, Albert (Prof. Dr.)
Albert Hafner holds a full professorship in Prehistoric Archaeology and is member of the Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research (OCCR) at the University of Bern, Switzerland. His research interests include Holocene human-environment relationships, social developments and elites, burial rites, underwater archaeology and alpine archaeology. Main ongoing research projects funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation and the European Research Council are related to lake-side settlements in the Alpine Space and the Balkans.
Hahn-Weishaupt, Andrea
Andrea Hahn-Weishaupt studied prehistoric archaeology and human anthropology in Freiburg i.Br. and Tübingen. Since 1997, she has been running a successful archaeological excavation company in tandem with her husband, and in the interim, her daughter joined them as well. The company specialises in an extensive spectrum of archaeological pursuits, encompassing historical cemeteries, medieval village and town centres, prehistoric sites, and tangible remnants of the Nazi terror regime. Since 1998, she has been leading large-scale field inspections in the Uckermark, Brandenburg, as part of a job creation measure. In 2010, Andrea Hahn-Weishaupt joined the Archäologische Gesellschaft in Berlin und Brandenburg as a board member.
Halbertsma, Ruurd Binnert (Prof. Dr.)
Ruurd Binnert Halbertsma (1958) is curator in the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, professor at the Faculty of Archaeology of Leiden University and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London.
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.
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.
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.
Harding, D. W. (Prof. (em.) Dr.)
Dennis Harding graduated from the University of Oxford, where he also gained his doctorate in archaeology under the supervision of Professor Christopher Hawkes. For thirty years he was Abercromby Professor of Archaeology in the University of Edinburgh, 1977-2007, serving terms as Dean of Arts and subsequently as Vice-Principal of the University. He had previously been Lecturer in Celtic Archaeology at the University of Durham, where he had taken up flying for archaeological air photography, principally operating in the Anglo-Scottish borders and in the Northern and Western Isles. His aerial survey was complemented by excavation, notably in the Western Isles, and the results of his research were included in his synthesis The Iron Age in Northern Britain (2004; second edition 2017).