1341 search results for “artefact analysis” in the Public website
- This Week's Discoveries | 2 juni 2020
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Small Grant Research Projects
The LUCDH foster the development of new digital research by awarding a number of Small Grants each year. As in previous years the LUCDH received a large number of excellent grant applications for Research and Personal Development funds. Congratulations to the recipients of this year's research award…
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Recent Advances in the Study of Ancient Migrations: Isotopes and Isoscapes
Lecture, Studium Generale
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‘How much damage has Palmyra actually suffered?'
Peter Akkermans, Professor of Archaeology of the Middle East, cannot say for certain how much damage the destruction by IS has caused in Palmyra.
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Fulbright scholarship takes Sara Polak to Yale
Sara Polak, PhD researcher and lecturer at LUCAS, has won a Fulbright scholarship to work on her research on Franklin D. Roosevelt at Yale University from September 2014 till February 2015.
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Walking among elephants: A 300,000-year-old, nearly complete elephant skeleton from Schöningen
Elephants ranged over Schöningen in Lower Saxony 300,000 years ago. In recent years, remains of at least ten elephants have been found at the Palaeolithic sites situated on the edges of the former opencast lignite mine. Now, a collaboration of archaeologists from University of Tübingen and the Lower…
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Seeing the Romans - and ourselves - in a different light
Globalisation means becoming globalised, a process in which material culture plays a crucial role. This is what Miguel John Versluys, the new Professor of Classical and Mediterranean Archaeology, teaches. He bases his teaching on research into the origin and growth of the Roman Empire from the 3rd…
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A cabinet of curiosities for science policy
How does the government know whether science policy has the desired effect? According to Professor Barend van der Meulen, a variety of evidence about the effectiveness of science policy and proper gathering of this evidence are more important than a strict scientific method. Inaugural lecture 27 Ma…
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VICI Award for Miguel John Versluys
Dr. Miguel John Versluys (Archaeology) has been awarded a prestigious Vici grant for his project: "Innovating objects. The agency of global connections in the Roman world (200-30 BC)." Seven researchers from Leiden University received Vici grants in 2016. The funding will allow the scholars to carry…
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Working from home as an Archaeologist: 'As far as I know, no one has ever explored my living room for lost cities'
At first glance, archaeology seems like a job that is hard to take home. Nothing could be further from the truth though! Our archaeologists are currently developing new dating methods, are looking for lost cities in their living rooms, and perform daring acts of experimental archaeology!
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Archaeology students find 7th-century graves
Two graves dating from the 7th century have been discovered during an archaeological excavation in Leiden. One of the graves was found by a student of Archaeology during the first-year fieldwork project that took place at the same time as the excavation. The well-preserved graves are interesting because…
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How the Arabs gained control of Egypt
How did Fustat develop between 640 and 750 to become the capital of Egypt? At the time Egypt was a province of the Islamic empire - the caliphate - that had been started by the prophet Muhammad. Original sources used by Arabist Jelle Bruning give new insights into the city. PhD defence on 2 April.
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High-tech imaging reveals rare precolonial Mexican manuscript hidden from view for 500 years
Researchers from the University of Oxford’s Bodleian Libraries and from universities in the Netherlands have used high-tech imaging to uncover the details of a rare Mexican codex dating from before the colonisation of America.
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Archaeologists in action: stories from the field
During the summer, staff of the Faculty of Archaeology congregate in all parts of the world, initiating or joining fieldwork projects. Read some of their stories here!
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Electives of Ancient Near Eastern Studies: ‘You can really get a closer look at the subject matter’
Are you interested in ancient Egypt, the rich cultural heritage of Mesopotamia or bliblical Hebrew and Aramaic? Students of all faculties can follow electives of Ancient Near Eastern Studies without prior knowledge or special entry requirements. Archaeology student Annely Arends talks about her expe…
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Astronomers capture first-ever image of a multi-planet system around a Sun-like star
An international team led by Leiden astronomers has taken the first-ever image of a young, Sun-like star accompanied by two giant exoplanets. The researchers used The European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope for this, known as ESO’s VLT. Images of systems with multiple exoplanets are extremely…
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Hiroshima Peace Tree comes to Blekerspark
On 23 September, the Leiden alderman for the Management of Public Space was presented with a Ginkgo Biloba in the Blekerspark. This special 'Peace Tree' was grown from a seed from a tree that survived the atomic bomb that devastated Hiroshima. The Peace Tree is being temporarily housed in Leiden's Hortus…
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2011 Monte Alban
At the VIth Monte Albán Round Table conference (July 2011) in Oaxaca, Mexico, Maarten Jansen (Leiden University) together with Mexican archaeologists Dante García and Iván Rivera (both from the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia) discussed the topography and toponyms of the archaeological…
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A piece of Japan in Leiden
He was the man who introduced Western medicine into Japan. Philipp Franz Von Siebold (1796-1866) also brought Japanese plants and artefacts to Leiden, and so to Europe.
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Materials from the past contain lessons for today
Studying ancient materials and the way they were made can give us groundbreaking insights into the past. Not only that, the interplay between people and materials is highly relevant for society today, says Ann Brysbaert, Professor of Ancient Technologies, Crafts and Materials, at the Faculty of Archaeology.…
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The Flow of Ancient Metal across Eurasia (FLAME)
Lecture
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L.A.S. Terra symposium: Repatriation
Conference
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Negen lezingen rond de evolutietheorie
‘De evolutietheorie is gewoon keiharde logica’, zegt Bas Haring. ‘Het is een redenering op basis van drie observaties: organismen zijn allemaal een beetje verschillend, eigenschappen zijn erfelijk, het leven is een tranendal.’ Woensdag 4 februari start Studium Generale een lezingencyclus naar aanleiding…
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Last Skies: Avian Imaginaries in Video Art from the Middle East
Arts and Culture, LUCIS and RCMC film screening and panel discussion
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Globalviews & 3D-Perspectives
Seminar
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Response to the challenges of cognitive science of religion
Lecture
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Advanced alien civilisations in the local Universe – good night, sleep tight!
Lecture
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Landscapes of Survival
Pastoralist Societies, Rock Art and Literacy in Jordan’s Black Desert (200 BC to 800 AD)
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BRASILIAE. Indigenous Knowledge in the Making of Science: Historia Naturalis Brasiliae (1648).
Investigating the intercultural connections that shaped practices of knowledge production in colonial Dutch Brazil.
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Tell Sabi Abyad (Syria)
Leiden University and the Netherlands National Museum of Antiquities (Rijksmuseum van Oudheden) are jointly involved in the intensive archaeological exploration of Northern Syria, by means of field surveys and large-scale excavations at a number of archaeological sites in the Balikh basin: the Tell…
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From Stone Age to Space Age
Conference
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LCN2 Seminar: Detection of Dynamic Communities in Social Networks through the use of Multi-Objective Genetic Algorithms
Lecture
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1st LCDS meeting: Metabolomics & Data Science
Conference
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3rd LCDS meeting: Astrophysics & Data Science
Conference
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LIBC Sylvius Lecture
Lecture
- Leiden Interdisciplinary Migration Seminars
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Joan van der Waals colloquium
Lecture
- ILS Lunch Seminar met Leandro Mancano van de University of Edinburgh
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Comparative Reasoning in International Courts and Tribunals
Book Launch & Discussion
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This Week’s Discoveries | 26 September 2017
Lecture
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LCN2 Seminar: Trajectories through unobserved temporal networks
Lecture
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This Week’s Discoveries | 9 October 2018
Lecture
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This Week’s Discoveries | 14 November 2017
Lecture
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This Week's Discoveries | 23 June 2020
Lecture
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This Week’s Discoveries | 10 October 2017
Lecture
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This Week's Discoveries | 16 april 2019
Lecture
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Advanced alien civilisations in the local Universe – good night, sleep tight!
Lecture
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Towards a process archaeology (and beyond questions of agency)
Lecture
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Collecting Historic Cairo through drawing, photography and artifact: amateur Arthur-Ali Rhoné and the production of antiquarian knowledge on
Lecture
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Egypt beyond representation
PhD Defence