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UCL's Institute of Archaeology is an academic department of the Social & Historical Sciences Faculty of University College London (UCL) which it joined in 1986 having previously been a school of the University of London.
The UCL Institute of Archaeology is an academic department of University College London (UCL), in the United Kingdom. The institute is located in a separate building at the north end of Gordon Square, Bloomsbury. It was originally a separate institution within the University of London, but for financial reasons joined UCL in 1986.
With the help of Wang Tao, then Lecturer in Chinese art and archaeology at SOAS and others, he developed links with archaeological departments in the People's Republic of China, and arranged for two joint posts in Chinese archaeology to be shared between UCL and SOAS, one of which was taken by Wang. The International Centre for Chinese Heritage ...
UCL merged with the Institute of Archaeology in 1986. [14] The Constitution Unit was established in April 1995. [ 15 ] The School of Slavonic and East European Studies merged with UCL in 1999.
Peter John Ucko FRAI FSA (27 July 1938 – 14 June 2007) was an influential English archaeologist.He served as Director of the Institute of Archaeology at University College London (UCL), and was a Fellow of both the Royal Anthropological Institute and the Society of Antiquaries.
She had studied prehistoric archaeology at the University of Edinburgh and conservation at the University of London, before becoming a conservator at the British Museum. She was Professor of Archaeological and Museum Conservation at UCL Institute of Archaeology until she retired in 2013: she is now emeritus professor. [2] [3] [4] [5]
Roberts was a principal research fellow at the UCL Institute of Archaeology. [1] He has twice been awarded the Stopes Medal for his contribution to the study of Palaeolithic humans and Pleistocene geology, [2] [3] and in 2021 was made an Honorary Fellow of West Dean College of Arts and Conservation. [4]
Prior to joining the Institute of Archaeology in 1990, Sue Hamilton taught archaeology at Birkbeck College and the Polytechnic of North London. [5] Her early research focused on later British prehistory and pottery and she was a contributor to the UK Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group's, The Study of Later Prehistoric Pottery: Guidelines for Analysis and Publication (1991), which has been ...