Raven, Maarten J. (Prof. dr.)

Maarten J. Raven worked as Curator of the Egyptian Department of the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden (National Museum of Antiquities) at Leiden, The Netherlands, from 1978 to 2018, and is now honorary research associate of that institution. In this capacity he organized numerous exhibitions, especially on the Leiden papyrus collection, mummy research, Dutch excavations in Egypt, and Egyptian magic. He was also responsible for the new display of the Egyptian collection (2016). He wrote numerous books and articles on egyptological subjects, and was also active as tour conductor and lecturer. His special interests include the history of egyptology, egyptomania, and ancient Egyptian technology and symbolism. From 2012 to 2018, he was extraordinary professor for the museology of Ancient Egypt at Leiden State University.

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Reeves Flores, Jodi (Dr.)

Jodi Reeves Flores received her PhD in Archaeology from the University of Exeter. Her doctoral thesis explored the perceived value of replicative experimental in academic archaeology. She is an Editor for the EXARC Journal and Digest and is also a Fellow in Data Curation for the Sciences and Social Science at Arizona State University Libraries and the Center for Digital Antiquity.

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Reilly, Matthew C. (Dr.)

Matthew C. Reilly is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the City College of New York. He conducts research in Barbados and Liberia. He is the author of Archaeology below the Cliff: Race, Class, and Redlegs in Barbadian Sugar Society.

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Rensen, Marleen (Dr.)

Marleen Rensen is a Senior Lecturer in Modern European Literature at the European Studies Department of the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. She specializes in life writing and modern literature and has a particular interest in the lives of French and German artists in the twentieth and twenty-first century.

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Reuter, Anna E.

Anna E. Reuter is a public relations officer at the Collaborative Research Centre 1266 and a postdoctoral researcher in the field of archaeobotany at the Institute for Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology, Kiel University (Germany). Her scientific research specialises in archaeobotany and focuses primarily on the Byzantine Empire, especially Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean region. Her scientific interests centre on the interaction between humans and their environment. Her focus is on the transformation of subsistence strategies against the background of the socio-economic situation of a society. The development and answering of socio-cultural and socio-economic questions as well as the development and application of innovative methods in local, regional and supra-regional contexts play a special role in her scientific research. She studied Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology, Zoology and Botany and completed her PhD at Kiel University in 2018. Following her studies, she was a scholarship holder and research assistant at the LAIZA Mainz (formerly RGZM) and the CAU Kiel and was involved in various scientific projects.

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Rhodes, Stephen MSc (MSc)

Stephen Rhodes is a zooarchaeologist interested in the shift from hunting to herding in the Neolithic of Southwest Asia. He has worked in Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan, and since 2017 is involved in an ongoing project in Kvemo Kartli, Georgia. The large numbers of bone tools recovered from the excavations in Georgia have led him to incorporate these objects, and the perishable technologies they represent, into his analysis of Neolithic subsistence change. He is currently a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto.

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Ricci, Andrea (Dr.)

Andrea Ricci is an archaeologist specialised in the study of the prehistory of Southwestern Asia. He completed his first MA studies at La Sapienza University in Rome (Italy) and then he received a second MA degree at Durham University (UK). After completing his PhD in the framework of the Graduate School “Human Development in Landscapes” at Kiel University, he held a post-doctoral position at the Eurasia Department of the German Archaeological Institute. He is currently a scientific coordinator of the Cluster of Excellence ROOTS at Kiel University. He has conducted field projects in Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Syria.

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Raven, Maarten J. (Prof. dr.)

Maarten J. Raven worked as Curator of the Egyptian Department of the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden (National Museum of Antiquities) at Leiden, The Netherlands, from 1978 to 2018, and is now honorary research associate of that institution. In this capacity he organized numerous exhibitions, especially on the Leiden papyrus collection, mummy research, Dutch excavations in Egypt, and Egyptian magic. He was also responsible for the new display of the Egyptian collection (2016). He wrote numerous books and articles on egyptological subjects, and was also active as tour conductor and lecturer. His special interests include the history of egyptology, egyptomania, and ancient Egyptian technology and symbolism. From 2012 to 2018, he was extraordinary professor for the museology of Ancient Egypt at Leiden State University.

read more

Reeves Flores, Jodi (Dr.)

Jodi Reeves Flores received her PhD in Archaeology from the University of Exeter. Her doctoral thesis explored the perceived value of replicative experimental in academic archaeology. She is an Editor for the EXARC Journal and Digest and is also a Fellow in Data Curation for the Sciences and Social Science at Arizona State University Libraries and the Center for Digital Antiquity.

read more

Reilly, Matthew C. (Dr.)

Matthew C. Reilly is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the City College of New York. He conducts research in Barbados and Liberia. He is the author of Archaeology below the Cliff: Race, Class, and Redlegs in Barbadian Sugar Society.

read more

Rensen, Marleen (Dr.)

Marleen Rensen is a Senior Lecturer in Modern European Literature at the European Studies Department of the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. She specializes in life writing and modern literature and has a particular interest in the lives of French and German artists in the twentieth and twenty-first century.

read more

Reuter, Anna E.

Anna E. Reuter is a public relations officer at the Collaborative Research Centre 1266 and a postdoctoral researcher in the field of archaeobotany at the Institute for Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology, Kiel University (Germany). Her scientific research specialises in archaeobotany and focuses primarily on the Byzantine Empire, especially Southeast Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean region. Her scientific interests centre on the interaction between humans and their environment. Her focus is on the transformation of subsistence strategies against the background of the socio-economic situation of a society. The development and answering of socio-cultural and socio-economic questions as well as the development and application of innovative methods in local, regional and supra-regional contexts play a special role in her scientific research. She studied Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology, Zoology and Botany and completed her PhD at Kiel University in 2018. Following her studies, she was a scholarship holder and research assistant at the LAIZA Mainz (formerly RGZM) and the CAU Kiel and was involved in various scientific projects.

read more

Rhodes, Stephen MSc (MSc)

Stephen Rhodes is a zooarchaeologist interested in the shift from hunting to herding in the Neolithic of Southwest Asia. He has worked in Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan, and since 2017 is involved in an ongoing project in Kvemo Kartli, Georgia. The large numbers of bone tools recovered from the excavations in Georgia have led him to incorporate these objects, and the perishable technologies they represent, into his analysis of Neolithic subsistence change. He is currently a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto.

read more

Ricci, Andrea (Dr.)

Andrea Ricci is an archaeologist specialised in the study of the prehistory of Southwestern Asia. He completed his first MA studies at La Sapienza University in Rome (Italy) and then he received a second MA degree at Durham University (UK). After completing his PhD in the framework of the Graduate School “Human Development in Landscapes” at Kiel University, he held a post-doctoral position at the Eurasia Department of the German Archaeological Institute. He is currently a scientific coordinator of the Cluster of Excellence ROOTS at Kiel University. He has conducted field projects in Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Syria.

read more




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