Pollock, Susan (Prof. dr.)
Susan Pollock is professor of Western Asian Archaeology at the Freie Universität Berlin and professor emerita of Anthropology at Binghamton University. She has long-standing research interests in village, early state, and urban societies in Western Asia and has conducted fieldwork in Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Turkmenistan. Her recent work has involved much more recent periods, with field projects on sites of the 20th century in and around Berlin. Her work draws on feminist and political economic approaches to the study of the past, with specific attention to processes of subjectivation and the place of commensality in social life.
Pomstra, Diederik
Diederik Pomstra (Het Stenen Tijdperk) is prehistorisch ambachtsman en experimenteel archeoloog. Hij is geïnteresseerd in (bijna) alle kennis en vaardigheden die de mens vroeger gebruikte om te leven in de stille, groene wereld van toen. Diederik werkt als zzp’er voor een brede klantenkring van wetenschappers, musea en universiteiten tot film- en televisieproducenten en verzamelaars in binnen- en buitenland. Daarnaast is hij in dienst bij de Universiteit Leiden, Aeres Hogeschool en de University of York (Verenigd Koninkrijk).
Porcier, Stéphanie
Stéphanie Porcier is an Egyptologist and Archeozoologist specializing in the study of animals in ancient Egypt and especially animal mummies. She directs the inter- and multidisciplinary program MAHES (French acronym for Egyptian Animal and Human Mummies) which aims to study the most important collection of animal mummies outside Egypt kept at the Musée des Confluences, Lyon (France).
Porqueddu, Marie-Elise (Dr.)
Marie-Elise Porqueddu is a PhD in Prehistory and a post-doctoral researcher at the École des hautes études hispaniques et ibériques, Casa de Velázquez (Spain). Her research focuses on carving savoir-faire and Neolithic underground architectures (mining sites and rock-cut tombs) in the Western Mediterranean.
Prlić, Doris
Doris Prlić is coordinator of the European cooperation project SWICH – Sharing a World of Inclusion, Creativity and Heritage at Weltmuseum Wien (since January 2015). She previously worked as independent curator, realizing projects for different cultural organisations such as Festival der Regionen or afo – architekturforum oberösterreich (Linz, Austria).
Pullen, Daniel J. (Prof. (em.) dr.)
Daniel J. Pullen is Professor Emeritus of Classics at Florida State University. He co-directs (with Tom Tartaron) the Saronic Harbors Archaeological Research Project, investigating the Mycenaean harbor town of Kalamianos. He also participates in the Diros Regional Project’s Ksagounaki Excavations exploring the open-air Final Neolithic settlement and cemetery associated with the Alepotrypa Cave. He is preparing for publication the volume on the small finds from the Early and Middle Bronze Age levels at Lerna for the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. He is the author of Nemea Valley Archaeological Project I: The Early Bronze Age Village on Tsoungiza Hill (American School of Classical Studies at Athens 2011) and editor of Political Economies of the Aegean Bronze Age (Oxbow 2010). His research interests include landscape archaeology, emergence of complex societies, and socio-political and economic organization in the Aegean Neolithic and Bronze Age.
Quinnell, Henrietta BA, PG Dip (BA, PG Dip)
Henrietta Quinnell, BA (Wales) FSA MIfA, was Lecturer in Archaeology in the Department of Adult Education 1970-99 at Exeter University and gained wide experience of prehistoric sites in South West Britain. More recently she has developed her expertise in the prehistoric pottery of the region in which she is now the acknowledged expert, publishing widely in regional and national journals.
Pollock, Susan (Prof. dr.)
Susan Pollock is professor of Western Asian Archaeology at the Freie Universität Berlin and professor emerita of Anthropology at Binghamton University. She has long-standing research interests in village, early state, and urban societies in Western Asia and has conducted fieldwork in Iraq, Iran, Turkey, and Turkmenistan. Her recent work has involved much more recent periods, with field projects on sites of the 20th century in and around Berlin. Her work draws on feminist and political economic approaches to the study of the past, with specific attention to processes of subjectivation and the place of commensality in social life.
Pomstra, Diederik
Diederik Pomstra (Het Stenen Tijdperk) is prehistorisch ambachtsman en experimenteel archeoloog. Hij is geïnteresseerd in (bijna) alle kennis en vaardigheden die de mens vroeger gebruikte om te leven in de stille, groene wereld van toen. Diederik werkt als zzp’er voor een brede klantenkring van wetenschappers, musea en universiteiten tot film- en televisieproducenten en verzamelaars in binnen- en buitenland. Daarnaast is hij in dienst bij de Universiteit Leiden, Aeres Hogeschool en de University of York (Verenigd Koninkrijk).
Porcier, Stéphanie
Stéphanie Porcier is an Egyptologist and Archeozoologist specializing in the study of animals in ancient Egypt and especially animal mummies. She directs the inter- and multidisciplinary program MAHES (French acronym for Egyptian Animal and Human Mummies) which aims to study the most important collection of animal mummies outside Egypt kept at the Musée des Confluences, Lyon (France).
Porqueddu, Marie-Elise (Dr.)
Marie-Elise Porqueddu is a PhD in Prehistory and a post-doctoral researcher at the École des hautes études hispaniques et ibériques, Casa de Velázquez (Spain). Her research focuses on carving savoir-faire and Neolithic underground architectures (mining sites and rock-cut tombs) in the Western Mediterranean.
Prlić, Doris
Doris Prlić is coordinator of the European cooperation project SWICH – Sharing a World of Inclusion, Creativity and Heritage at Weltmuseum Wien (since January 2015). She previously worked as independent curator, realizing projects for different cultural organisations such as Festival der Regionen or afo – architekturforum oberösterreich (Linz, Austria).
Pullen, Daniel J. (Prof. (em.) dr.)
Daniel J. Pullen is Professor Emeritus of Classics at Florida State University. He co-directs (with Tom Tartaron) the Saronic Harbors Archaeological Research Project, investigating the Mycenaean harbor town of Kalamianos. He also participates in the Diros Regional Project’s Ksagounaki Excavations exploring the open-air Final Neolithic settlement and cemetery associated with the Alepotrypa Cave. He is preparing for publication the volume on the small finds from the Early and Middle Bronze Age levels at Lerna for the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. He is the author of Nemea Valley Archaeological Project I: The Early Bronze Age Village on Tsoungiza Hill (American School of Classical Studies at Athens 2011) and editor of Political Economies of the Aegean Bronze Age (Oxbow 2010). His research interests include landscape archaeology, emergence of complex societies, and socio-political and economic organization in the Aegean Neolithic and Bronze Age.
Quinnell, Henrietta BA, PG Dip (BA, PG Dip)
Henrietta Quinnell, BA (Wales) FSA MIfA, was Lecturer in Archaeology in the Department of Adult Education 1970-99 at Exeter University and gained wide experience of prehistoric sites in South West Britain. More recently she has developed her expertise in the prehistoric pottery of the region in which she is now the acknowledged expert, publishing widely in regional and national journals.