Professor Susan Sherratt
MA, DPhil, FSA
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Emeritus Professor of East Mediterranean Archaeology
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+44 114 222 0183
Full contact details
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Room D09
Minalloy House
10-16 Regent Street
ºù«Ӱҵ
S1 3NJ
- Profile
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I read Classics as an undergraduate at New Hall, Cambridge, and completed a DPhil on 12th century BC Mycenaean pottery at Somerville College, Oxford in 1982. I researched and taught in Oxford, based latterly in the Department of Antiquities, Ashmolean Museum, for many years before coming to ºù«Ӱҵ in 2005.
- Research interests
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My research interests are in the Bronze and Early Iron Ages of the Aegean, Cyprus and the wider eastern Mediterranean, particularly in all aspects of trade and interaction within and beyond these regions.
I am also interested in exploring the ways in which the Homeric epics and the archaeological record can most usefully be combined.
Current research projects/collaborations
Silver before coinage: a history of silver from the fifth millennium to the mid-first millennium BC
This project traces the history of silver from its beginnings in the 4th millennium BC in western Asia (roughly contemporary with the appearance of the Uruk urban centres) to the mid-1st millennium BC (shortly after the introduction of coinage), by which time silver resources were being exploited over a very wide area of the western Old World. Among other things, this history investigates and seeks to explain the social, cultural and economic processes by which silver became the elite metal of choice in southern Mesopotamia during the 4th millennium BC, and subsequently for ceremonial drinking equipment, as a standard and medium of exchange and eventually for coinage over a much wider area.
The web-based ArchAtlas project was founded by the late Andrew Sherratt in 2003, and transferred to the Department of Archaeology in 2005. Since his death I have acted as academic director, along with Debi Harlan and Toby Wilkinson exploring ways in which it can continue to develop as a useful tool for research and teaching. The project aims to provide a visual summary of spatial processes in prehistoric and early historic times, such as the spread of farming, the formation of trade contacts, and the growth of urban systems, and to illustrate the development of settlement history at a variety of scales. In partnership with other projects and groups, it also aims to create a scholarly digital atlas (eventually including sites, environments, cultures and chronologies). Visual essays which explore a range of archaeological problems and themes are published in the ArchAtlas Journal.
A collaborative, interdisciplinary archaeological research project, directed by Professor Owen Doonan of California State University-Northridge and Dr Alex Bauer of Queens College, City University of New York. Its aim is to investigate long-term patterns of land use and settlement and communication networks in the Black Sea coastal region of Sinop, Turkey, from the inland valleys and mountains to the sea, by employing both extensive reconnaissance of its numerous ecological zones and intensive techniques of systematic survey and excavation in selected zones.
This project, directed by Professor Maria Iacovou of the University of Cyprus, aims to trace the long-term development and topography of the urban centre of Palaepaphos in south-west Cyprus in the 2nd -1st millennia BC. It is also concerned with the development of a framework of principles in which modern development and the preservation of archaeological landscapes can co-exist.
- Publications
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Edited books
Journal articles
Chapters
Website content
- Research group
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Current Research Students
- Stavroula Fouriki- "Materiality and social practice in Late Bronze Age Chania, Crete: Detecting socio-political change in ceramics of the Late Minoan IÎ’-IIIB period"
- Nicholas Groat- "Reconstructing, charting, and exploring the development of early alcohol distillation through experiment"
- Martina Monaco- "A critical examination of social stratification in prehistoric Cyprus using skeletal and funerary data"
- Dora Olah- "Marble figurines of the 3rd Millennium BC Aegean and south-west Anatolia"
- Lamia Sassine- "Elusive Phoenicians: perceptions of Phoenician identity and material culture as reflected in museum records and displays"
- Professional activities and memberships
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- Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries
- Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland
Links