De Haan, Nathalie (Dr.)

Nathalie de Haan is senior lecturer in Ancient History at Radboud University (Nijmegen, The Netherlands). She published on Roman baths and bathing culture, domestic architecture, archaeology in Fascist Italy, and contributed with various publications to the field of Reception Studies, such as the recent volume Framing Classical Reception Studies, Leiden 2020, co-edited with Maarten De Pourcq and David Rijser. She is the author of Römische Privatbäder. Entwicklung, Verbreitung, Struktur und sozialer Status, Frankfurt am Main 2010. With Kurt Wallat she conducted research and excavations in the Central Baths of Pompeii (monograph forthcoming). Her current research interests include the multifaceted role of archaeology, heritage and the Classics in Italy in the 19th and 20th centuries.

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De Leeuw, Peter

Peter de Leeuw studeerde geschiedenis in Leiden, met zeegeschiedenis als specialisatie. Hij schreef als freelancejournalist artikelen onder andere voor het Leidse universiteitsblad De Mare en De Volkskrant. Na zijn studie werkte hij als beleidsadviseur (onder meer op het gebied van internationale scheepvaartpolitiek) voor het Ministerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat en de opvolgers van dat ministerie. In die periode en na zijn pensionering schreef (en schrijft) hij artikelen, veelal over historische onderwerpen, voor diverse bladen en websites. Hij voorzag de transcriptie van het scheepsjournaal van verklarende noten en schreef de hoofdstukken met achtergrondinformatie over Arnold Hogerwaard en zijn medepassagiers, en over diverse aspecten van de reis.

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De Leeuwe, R. (Dr.)

After finishing a Bachelor degree in Maritime Engineering in 1996 at the Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences, Roosje worked on stability calculations for drilling rigs and technical designing for several engineering agencies for a couple of years. In 1998 she started studying Archaeology at Leiden University, besides work. During her studies she gained fieldwork experience in the Netherlands, Mali, Malawi, and Tanzania. In 2003, the final year of prehistoric studies, with a specialization in maritime archaeology, she started to work at Archol, a commercial archaeological company attached to Leiden University. In 2004 she got a Master degree in Archaeology with a thesis on East African ship building traditions. After working for 8.5 years as a field archaeologist, she changed in 2011 to working as a forensic archaeologist at the Netherlands Forensic Institute. The work there involved case investigations commissioned by the police and judicial authorities such as the International Tribunal in The Hague, research and development related to missing persons, buried victims, crime scene investigation and identification. In 2017 she changed back to field archaeology and since works as a project manager at RAAP West conducting archaeological research in Central and West-Netherlands. In 2023 she received a PhD in archaeology for her thesis ´before temples´, on structures related to the Iron Age belief system in the Low Countries.

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de Medeiros, José Eduardo M. (Dr.)

Born in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, Dr José Eduardo M. de Medeiros studied Archaeological Sciences, Philosophy and Cultural as well as Physical Anthropology in Freiburg im Breisgau in Germany, Austin, Texas, USA and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. His view of archaeology as a long term understanding of the cultural development of humankind guided his interest towards a historico-genetic understanding of the worlds of meaning in the past and present.

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de Moor, Jos (Dr.)

Jos de Moor studeerde af in kwartairgeologie en fluviatiele geomorfologie aan de Vrije Universiteit te Amsterdam. Hij werkte vervolgens voor ADC-Archeoprojecten en was onder meer betrokken bij opgravingen die zijn uitgevoerd in het kader van de aanleg van de HSL en de opgravingen van de villa Holzkuil in Kerkrade. Daarna promoveerde hij op een gedetailleerde reconstructie van de Geul (in het Zuidlimburgse lössgebied) in relatie tot menselijke en klimatologische invloeden.

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De Vries, Karen (Dr.)

Karen de Vries studied Archaeology and Greek and Latin Languages and Cultures at the University of Groningen. In 2015, she obtained her research master’s degree ‘Art History and Archaeology’ cum laude at the University of Groningen. In the same year, she was awarded the W.A. van Es-prijs for her master thesis on Iron Age deposition practices on the Fries-Drents plateau. She was awarded a research grant from ARCHON/NWO for her PhD project titled Settling with the norm? Norm and variation in social groups and their material manifestations in (Roman) Iron Age (800 BC–AD 300) settlement sites of the northern Netherlands. From 2015 to 2021 she worked as a PhD candidate and as a lecturer at the Groningen Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen. In 2021, she started as Archaeological Researcher at ADC ArcheoProjecten.

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de Vries, Nynke (MSc.)

Nynke de Vries studied Northwest European prehistory at the University of Groningen with main focus on the neolithic, mainly Funnelbeaker culture. After graduating in 2015 she now works in the field of archaeology in the Netherlands. After working for Transect bv and Salisbury bv as a project leader, as well as a period in Germany for Salisbury Gmbh, she is currently working at RAAP.

read more

De Haan, Nathalie (Dr.)

Nathalie de Haan is senior lecturer in Ancient History at Radboud University (Nijmegen, The Netherlands). She published on Roman baths and bathing culture, domestic architecture, archaeology in Fascist Italy, and contributed with various publications to the field of Reception Studies, such as the recent volume Framing Classical Reception Studies, Leiden 2020, co-edited with Maarten De Pourcq and David Rijser. She is the author of Römische Privatbäder. Entwicklung, Verbreitung, Struktur und sozialer Status, Frankfurt am Main 2010. With Kurt Wallat she conducted research and excavations in the Central Baths of Pompeii (monograph forthcoming). Her current research interests include the multifaceted role of archaeology, heritage and the Classics in Italy in the 19th and 20th centuries.

read more

De Leeuw, Peter

Peter de Leeuw studeerde geschiedenis in Leiden, met zeegeschiedenis als specialisatie. Hij schreef als freelancejournalist artikelen onder andere voor het Leidse universiteitsblad De Mare en De Volkskrant. Na zijn studie werkte hij als beleidsadviseur (onder meer op het gebied van internationale scheepvaartpolitiek) voor het Ministerie van Verkeer en Waterstaat en de opvolgers van dat ministerie. In die periode en na zijn pensionering schreef (en schrijft) hij artikelen, veelal over historische onderwerpen, voor diverse bladen en websites. Hij voorzag de transcriptie van het scheepsjournaal van verklarende noten en schreef de hoofdstukken met achtergrondinformatie over Arnold Hogerwaard en zijn medepassagiers, en over diverse aspecten van de reis.

read more

De Leeuwe, R. (Dr.)

After finishing a Bachelor degree in Maritime Engineering in 1996 at the Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences, Roosje worked on stability calculations for drilling rigs and technical designing for several engineering agencies for a couple of years. In 1998 she started studying Archaeology at Leiden University, besides work. During her studies she gained fieldwork experience in the Netherlands, Mali, Malawi, and Tanzania. In 2003, the final year of prehistoric studies, with a specialization in maritime archaeology, she started to work at Archol, a commercial archaeological company attached to Leiden University. In 2004 she got a Master degree in Archaeology with a thesis on East African ship building traditions. After working for 8.5 years as a field archaeologist, she changed in 2011 to working as a forensic archaeologist at the Netherlands Forensic Institute. The work there involved case investigations commissioned by the police and judicial authorities such as the International Tribunal in The Hague, research and development related to missing persons, buried victims, crime scene investigation and identification. In 2017 she changed back to field archaeology and since works as a project manager at RAAP West conducting archaeological research in Central and West-Netherlands. In 2023 she received a PhD in archaeology for her thesis ´before temples´, on structures related to the Iron Age belief system in the Low Countries.

read more

de Medeiros, José Eduardo M. (Dr.)

Born in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, Dr José Eduardo M. de Medeiros studied Archaeological Sciences, Philosophy and Cultural as well as Physical Anthropology in Freiburg im Breisgau in Germany, Austin, Texas, USA and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. His view of archaeology as a long term understanding of the cultural development of humankind guided his interest towards a historico-genetic understanding of the worlds of meaning in the past and present.

read more

de Moor, Jos (Dr.)

Jos de Moor studeerde af in kwartairgeologie en fluviatiele geomorfologie aan de Vrije Universiteit te Amsterdam. Hij werkte vervolgens voor ADC-Archeoprojecten en was onder meer betrokken bij opgravingen die zijn uitgevoerd in het kader van de aanleg van de HSL en de opgravingen van de villa Holzkuil in Kerkrade. Daarna promoveerde hij op een gedetailleerde reconstructie van de Geul (in het Zuidlimburgse lössgebied) in relatie tot menselijke en klimatologische invloeden.

read more

De Vries, Karen (Dr.)

Karen de Vries studied Archaeology and Greek and Latin Languages and Cultures at the University of Groningen. In 2015, she obtained her research master’s degree ‘Art History and Archaeology’ cum laude at the University of Groningen. In the same year, she was awarded the W.A. van Es-prijs for her master thesis on Iron Age deposition practices on the Fries-Drents plateau. She was awarded a research grant from ARCHON/NWO for her PhD project titled Settling with the norm? Norm and variation in social groups and their material manifestations in (Roman) Iron Age (800 BC–AD 300) settlement sites of the northern Netherlands. From 2015 to 2021 she worked as a PhD candidate and as a lecturer at the Groningen Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen. In 2021, she started as Archaeological Researcher at ADC ArcheoProjecten.

read more

de Vries, Nynke (MSc.)

Nynke de Vries studied Northwest European prehistory at the University of Groningen with main focus on the neolithic, mainly Funnelbeaker culture. After graduating in 2015 she now works in the field of archaeology in the Netherlands. After working for Transect bv and Salisbury bv as a project leader, as well as a period in Germany for Salisbury Gmbh, she is currently working at RAAP.

read more




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