Williams, Howard (Prof. Dr.)
Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester. Famous for his work on the study of death, burial and commemoration in Early Medieval Britain and Scandinavia, Howard also actively engages his audience through his well-loved blog and other social media channels.
Wingfield, Chris
Chris Wingfield is Senior Curator (Archaeology) at the Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, University of Cambridge. He has a particular interest in the museum and collections of the London Missionary Society. He has previously worked on a number of research projects at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford and as a curator at Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.
Wolf, Ulrike M. (Dr.)
Ulrike Wolf completed a Magister degree at Goethe University in Frankfurt, based on studies in Classical Archaeology and the History and Culture of the Roman Provinces. The Lichtenberg-project “Münzen und die Dynamik der Macht: Der westliche Mittelmeerraum, 500 – 100 v. Chr”, directed by Prof. Fleur Kemmers, offered her the perfect environment for the PhD thesis submitted in 2017.
She is interested in interface phenomena such as the analysis of archaeological, historical and social developments in periods and spaces of transition. In her teaching assignments she focuses on comparative analysis and interdisciplinary approaches to archaeological topics, as well as reception studies and the history of science. Recently she has been strongly involved in the implementation of e-learning methods and digital media in university teaching.
Wossink, Arne (Dr.)
Arne Wossink studied Archaeology of the Ancient Near East at Leiden University. In 2009 he received his PhD on a thesis entitled Challenging climate change. Competition and cooperation among pastoralists and agriculturalists in northern Mesopotamia (c. 3000-1600 BC). In the same year, the Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) has awarded a Rubicon grant to Arne Wossink for his research proposal A bird’s eye view: analyzing the effects of modern development on the archaeology of the Shahrazur Valley, Iraq.
Wunderlich, Maria (Dr.)
Maria Wunderlich is currently a Lecturer and Research Fellow at the Institute of Pre-and Protohistoric Archaeology, Kiel University. For her PhD-studies between 2014 and 2018 she was involved in the DFG-project “Equality and Inequality: Social Differentiation in Northern Central Europe 4300-2400 BC” as a research assistant. For her comparative thesis on “Megalithic monuments and social structures” she conducted ethnoarchaeological field work in Sumba, Indonesia, and Nagaland, North-East India. Being interested in social archaeology and comparative analyses, she combines different theoretical approaches with material data derived both in recent and archaeological contexts.
Ystgaard, Ingrid (Dr.)
Ingrid Ystgaard is an associate professor at the Department of Historical and Classical studies at the Norwegian University of Technology and Science. Her research interests include social dynamics, hierarchies, mobility, and warfare in the Iron Age. Between 2015 and 2019 she directed the excavations at Ørland Main Air Base for the Department of Archaeology and Cultural History, NTNU University Museum.
Zadoks, Jan C., (Prof. (em.) dr.)
Jan C. Zadoks, born in Amsterdam, 1929, studied biology at the University of Amsterdam, graduating in 1957. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Amsterdam in 1961, with honours, and joined the Wageningen Agricultural University as a plant pathologist. He developed various courses in the area of plant disease epidemiology.
Williams, Howard (Prof. Dr.)
Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester. Famous for his work on the study of death, burial and commemoration in Early Medieval Britain and Scandinavia, Howard also actively engages his audience through his well-loved blog and other social media channels.
Wingfield, Chris
Chris Wingfield is Senior Curator (Archaeology) at the Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, University of Cambridge. He has a particular interest in the museum and collections of the London Missionary Society. He has previously worked on a number of research projects at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford and as a curator at Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.
Wolf, Ulrike M. (Dr.)
Ulrike Wolf completed a Magister degree at Goethe University in Frankfurt, based on studies in Classical Archaeology and the History and Culture of the Roman Provinces. The Lichtenberg-project “Münzen und die Dynamik der Macht: Der westliche Mittelmeerraum, 500 – 100 v. Chr”, directed by Prof. Fleur Kemmers, offered her the perfect environment for the PhD thesis submitted in 2017.
She is interested in interface phenomena such as the analysis of archaeological, historical and social developments in periods and spaces of transition. In her teaching assignments she focuses on comparative analysis and interdisciplinary approaches to archaeological topics, as well as reception studies and the history of science. Recently she has been strongly involved in the implementation of e-learning methods and digital media in university teaching.
Wossink, Arne (Dr.)
Arne Wossink studied Archaeology of the Ancient Near East at Leiden University. In 2009 he received his PhD on a thesis entitled Challenging climate change. Competition and cooperation among pastoralists and agriculturalists in northern Mesopotamia (c. 3000-1600 BC). In the same year, the Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) has awarded a Rubicon grant to Arne Wossink for his research proposal A bird’s eye view: analyzing the effects of modern development on the archaeology of the Shahrazur Valley, Iraq.
Wunderlich, Maria (Dr.)
Maria Wunderlich is currently a Lecturer and Research Fellow at the Institute of Pre-and Protohistoric Archaeology, Kiel University. For her PhD-studies between 2014 and 2018 she was involved in the DFG-project “Equality and Inequality: Social Differentiation in Northern Central Europe 4300-2400 BC” as a research assistant. For her comparative thesis on “Megalithic monuments and social structures” she conducted ethnoarchaeological field work in Sumba, Indonesia, and Nagaland, North-East India. Being interested in social archaeology and comparative analyses, she combines different theoretical approaches with material data derived both in recent and archaeological contexts.
Ystgaard, Ingrid (Dr.)
Ingrid Ystgaard is an associate professor at the Department of Historical and Classical studies at the Norwegian University of Technology and Science. Her research interests include social dynamics, hierarchies, mobility, and warfare in the Iron Age. Between 2015 and 2019 she directed the excavations at Ørland Main Air Base for the Department of Archaeology and Cultural History, NTNU University Museum.
Zadoks, Jan C., (Prof. (em.) dr.)
Jan C. Zadoks, born in Amsterdam, 1929, studied biology at the University of Amsterdam, graduating in 1957. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Amsterdam in 1961, with honours, and joined the Wageningen Agricultural University as a plant pathologist. He developed various courses in the area of plant disease epidemiology.