EAA 2019
25 years
B e y o n d p a ra d i g m s
BERN
Associa
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25
years
Ar
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of
Europ
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4 - 7 September
e o l o g i st s ( E
Abstract Book
Beyo n d p a ra d i g m s
HOW TO READ THE ABSTRACT BOOK
The Abstract Book is ordered by session numbers which were allocated during the session submission (i.e., the number sequence is discontinuous).
Author’s affiliation is stated in brackets following the author’s name; where authors share the same affiliation, it is only stated once.
Index of Authors includes all session organisers and only the main authors of contributions.
Please note that names, titles and affiliations are reproduced as submitted by the session organisers and/or authors. Language and wording
of titles and abstracts are not revised.
25th EAA Annual Meeting (Bern, 2019) – Abstract Book
Technical editing: Kateřina Kleinová (EAA)
Design and layout: Susanna Kaufmann
ISBN: 978-80-907270-6-9
European Association of Archaeologists
Bern, August 2019
© European Association of Archaeologists, 2019
Contents ...
16
THE MATERIALITY OF HIGH ALTITUDES AND HIGH LATITUDES ...................................................................................................................................... 11
17
MEDIEVAL ARCHAEOLOGY IN EUROPE TODAY .................................................................................................................................................................... 12
27
ARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON REFORM AND REVOLUTION: MATERIAL CULTURE IN THE LONG ELEVENTH CENTURY.............. 12
39
RECENT ARCHAEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION IN INHABITED MEDIEVAL RURAL SETTLEMENTS: NEW PERSPECTIVES FROM HISTORIC
COMMUNITIES PAST AND PRESENT ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 17
43
THE POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY OF WESTERN ANATOLIA IN THE LBA, AND THE REGION’S INTERACTION WITH ITS NEIGHBOURS, IN
PARTICULAR THE BALKAN ......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 22
46
CENTRAL MEDITERRANEAN PREHISTORY AT THE EAA25 TURN: RESEARCH ADVANCES AND NEW DIRECTIONS ...................................... 27
55
FORGOTTEN CASTLE LANDSCAPES: CONNECTING RESEARCH AND HERITAGE, MONUMENTS AND LANDSCAPES .................................. 33
57
FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL. CURRENT PERSPECTIVES ON EDUCATION AND CULTURAL HERITAGE .................................................................... 37
60
BEYOND “FOUNDER CROPS”: NEW INSIGHTS INTO UNDERSTUDIED FOOD PLANT RESOURCES ...................................................................... 39
66
PROFESSIONAL COMMUNICATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH - TRAININGS AND OWNED MEDIA ..................................................... 42
68
15 YEARS AFTER MERRIMAN - PUBLIC ARCHAEOLOGY: LOOKING BACK AND THINKING ABOUT THE FUTURE ............................................ 44
69
POPULISM, IDENTITY POLITICS AND THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF EUROPE ....................................................................................................................... 46
73
MESSY METHODS: HERITAGE STUDIES AND THE QUEST FOR MULTI-METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES...................................................... 49
74
DE-COLONISATION AT EAA 25 YEARS ON: THE SOCIAL-ECONOMIC CONTRIBUTION OF CULTURAL HERITAGE CONSERVATION ........... 53
76
SYSTEMIC APPROACHES TO JUVENILE FUNERARY RITUALS. ATYPICAL, DEVIANT OR NORMATIVE? GOING BEYOND PARADIGMS ..... 55
81
FROM MICRO- TO MACROSCALE: IT’S ALL A MATTER OF PERSPECTIVE .................................................................................................................... 65
85
TRACKING NEOLITHISATION PROCESSES ON BOTH SIDES OF THE SINAI: A BRIDGE BETWEEN THE NEAR EAST AND NORTHEASTERN
AFRICA .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. 70
88
FUNERARY PRACTICES AT ÇATALHÖYÜK AND IN THE NEOLITHIC NEAR EAST: MULTIDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES ............................... 75
90
‘MASSIVE MIGRATIONS’? MULTISCALAR AND MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TO PREHISTORIC MIGRATIONS AND MOBILITY IN
EUROPE ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 78
91
BIOARCHAEOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING THE LONG-TERM DEVELOPMENT OF MOUNTAIN SOCIETIES ...................... 83
94
WORKING WITH CERAMICS IN THE 21ST CENTURY.......................................................................................................................................................... 86
95
CPAA SESSION: ORGANISING ARCHAEOLOGISTS – ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSOCIATIONS OF EUROPE.............................................................. 93
97
MOTHERHOOD IN (PRE-)HISTORY FROM A COMBINED BIO-ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL PERSPECTIVE ................................................ 95
107
LIVING (WORLD) HERITAGE CITIES. INSIGHTS FROM ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, AND
PLANNING AND DESIGN ............................................................................................................................................................................................................. 98
109
GETTING INTO SHAPE: RECONSIDERING THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN PERCEPTION, SKILL, COGNITION AND MATERIALS IN THE
DESIGN OF ANCIENT FIGURINES ...........................................................................................................................................................................................102
111
DEVELOPMENT OF HERITAGE MANAGEMENT EDUCATION ..........................................................................................................................................107
114
ILLEGAL OBTAINING AND TRADE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL ARTEFACTS: STATUS QUO AND COUNTERACTION...............................................107
121
CURRENT RESEARCH AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF NATIONAL POST-MEDIEVAL ARCHAEOLOGIES OVER THE LAST 25 YEARS .........109
125
COMMUNITIES, IDENTITIES, RITUALS. THE BRONZE/IRON AGE URNFIELDS AS A PAN-EUROPEAN PHENOMENON..................................113
128
BREAKING OLD PARADIGMS: THE ARCHAEOLOGY AND ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY OF PASTORALISM IN THE INNER AREAS OF THE
MEDITERRANEAN BASIN ..........................................................................................................................................................................................................119
133
ANCIENT TEXTILE PRODUCTION FROM AN INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH: HUMANITIES AND NATURAL SCIENCES INTERWOVEN
FOR OUR UNDERSTANDING OF TEXTILES...........................................................................................................................................................................122
140
FURNISHED INTERIORS IN THE ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN AND EGYPT.................................................................................................................128
142
SO CLOSE, NO MATTER HOW FAR? SKETCHING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN WATER- AND LANDSCAPES ACROSS EUROPE ..........132
144
TOWARDS A SPATIAL DATA INFRASTRUCTURE FOR ARCHAEOLOGY ........................................................................................................................137
150
DECOLONISING SPACE .............................................................................................................................................................................................................140
152
APPROACHING HEALTH STATUS, HEALTH CARE AND PEOPLE’S WELLBEING IN THE PAST FROM A DENTAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL
PERSPECTIVE ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................143
155
HOUSEHOLD TEXTILES IN AND BEYOND VIKING AGE .....................................................................................................................................................147
156
CRAFTING FOR THE USER: THE INTERSECTION OF DAILY LIFE AND OBJECT-MAKING ........................................................................................149
157
AT THE FRINGE OF EARLY NEOLITHISATION – FROM THE COASTS TO THE MOUNTAINS.....................................................................................152
162
CULTURE CONTACTS IN THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN SEA DURING THE ROMAN AGE. POTTERY AS CULTURAL MARKER BETWEEN
TRAFFICS AND LOCAL PRODUCTIONS .................................................................................................................................................................................157
164
THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF MEDICINE AND HEALING IN PREHISTORIC AND PROTOHISTORIC EUROPE ...............................................................163
168
VITRIFIED VIKINGS? ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................166
169
CRIMES IN THE PAST: ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL EVIDENCE ...................................................................................................170
171
CRITICAL IDEAS – REFLEXIVE ARCHAEOLOGIES ..............................................................................................................................................................176
172
TRANSITIONS IN AGRICULTURE: INTEGRATING ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCES......................................................................................................180
173
ARCHAEOLOGY OF MOUNTAINOUS LANDSCAPES IN BALKAN PREHISTORY .........................................................................................................187
174
ARCHAEOLOGY, HERITAGE AND PUBLIC VALUE ...............................................................................................................................................................194
175
RESEARCH DATA AND DIGITAL CORPORA: FROM ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDINGS TO ARTEFACTS OF THE FUTURE.....................................198
177
EAA2500 - THINKING THE FUTURE IN ARCHAEOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL HERITAGE MANAGEMENT ................................................201
178
MACRO WEATHER – MICRO CLIMATE: LOCAL PALAEO-CLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS AND SOCIAL RESPONSES AT A HUMAN SCALE ...
205
179
LIFE OF THE FRONTIER: FRONTIER HERITAGES AND LIVING HISTORIES ...................................................................................................................209
180
GENDER IS BURNING! 10 YEARS OF AGE COMMUNITY AND THE CURRENT STATE IN GENDER ARCHAEOLOGY .......................................211
181
SANCTUARIES OF EUBOEA ISLAND (GREECE) AND ITS COLONIES: RECENT EXCAVATIONS AND STUDIES ................................................212
184
FROM LANDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY TO SOUNDSCAPE ARCHAEOLOGY: THEMES, APPROACHES, AND PERSPECTIVES ........................216
185
POWER AND SATISFACTION OF NEEDS IN CENTRES OF POWER ................................................................................................................................220
191
FROM SCIENCE TO HISTORY: INTERPRETING ARCHAEOMETALLURGY .....................................................................................................................224
193
PATTERNS OF THE DEEP PAST. INTERROGATING THE ‘LONG TERM’ IN ARCHAEOLOGY AND HISTORY .........................................................231
196
GENDER AND OTHER BARRIERS: ARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES.......................................................................................................................234
197
CRAFTING RELEVANT STORIES: STEPS TOWARDS A SOCIALLY ENGAGED URBAN ARCHAEOLOGY ..............................................................237
198
THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF GLOBALIZATION BEYOND THE LATEST PARADIGM ...........................................................................................................238
199
RETHINKING THE INTERPRETATION OF VERTICAL PAST LAND USE ON MOUNTAIN ENVIRONMENTS ............................................................243
200
BLOCK BY BLOCK. ARCHAEOLOGIES OF URBAN LIFE FROM CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY TO THE MIDDLE AGES ................................................248
201
THE 3 DIMENSIONS OF DIGITALIZED ARCHAEOLOGY – DATA MANAGEMENT, SCIENTIFIC BENEFIT AND RISKS OF DATA STORAGE IN
ARCHAEOLOGICAL IMAGE-BASED 3D-DOCUMENTATION.............................................................................................................................................251
202
MEDIEVAL BUILDINGS AT RISK: CHALLENGES, ANALYSES, AND SOLUTIONS ........................................................................................................257
203
THE AGE BEYOND ‘PARADIGMS’ - ECLECTIC SHAPES OF PROCESSUALISM 2.0? ................................................................................................260
208
GENDER AND TECHNOLOGY IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES OF EVERYDAY LIFE (AGE SESSION) .................................................................263
209
DO WE STILL NEED LA TÈNE? PERSPECTIVES FROM THE MARGINS .........................................................................................................................266
210
METHODOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN FUNERARY TAPHONOMY ............................................................................................................................268
212
ROMAN ARCHAEOLOGY AND THE 21ST CENTURY..........................................................................................................................................................272
213
HUMANS BEYOND ARROWHEADS. QUESTIONING THE INTERPRETATIVE VALUE OF ARROWHEADS AND OTHER TOOLS FOR
RECONSTRUCTING PEOPLE IDENTITIES IN PREHISTORIC SOCIETIES .......................................................................................................................274
216
NEO-JADE: NEW PATTERNS IN STONE AGE EXOTIC STONE EXPLOITATION AROUND THE WORLD .................................................................278
217
‘UBIQUITOUS MONUMENTS, UBIQUITOUS PLACES’. CURRENT RESEARCH IN BARROW LANDSCAPES FROM PREHISTORIC TO
MODERN TIMES ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................282
218
WHY WE THINK WE KNOW WHAT THEY DID: DATA, EXPERIMENTS AND MODELS OF NEOLITHIC LAND USE ..............................................286
225
ORGANIC CONTAINERS AND CERAMIC - SUPPLEMENTARY OR COUNTERWEIGHT?............................................................................................288
228
LIVING ON THE EDGE? NEW ADVANCES ON PERIPHERAL SPACE IN PREHISTORY ...............................................................................................293
229
COMMUNITIES OF SOUTHERN ITALY BETWEEN THE LOCAL AND THE GLOBAL? ...................................................................................................297
233
SEAC 27: CULTURAL ASTRONOMY AND ONTOLOGY: HOW CELESTIAL OBJECTS AND EVENTS HAVE FEATURED IN THE BELIEF
SYSTEMS AND COSMOLOGIES OF DIFFERENT SOCIETIES ...........................................................................................................................................300
234
CROSSING NEW BORDERS: PROMOTING COLLABORATION BETWEEN EU, NON-EU AND EX-EU ARCHAEOLOGISTS ...............................304
237
FROM ELEMENT CONCENTRATION TO (PRE)HISTORY – PXRF AS TOOL FOR AN INTERPRETIVE ARCHAEOLOGY .......................................306
238
FUNCTIONAL ANALYSES OF HUNTER-GATHERER LITHIC TOOL ASSEMBLAGES ...................................................................................................312
239
UN-PACKAGING NEOLITHIC SOCIETIES: FROM STATIC NOTIONS TO BOTTOM-UP MODELS OF SOCIAL ORGANIZATION .........................317
240
“SWEET DREAMS (ARE MADE OF THIS)”: SUGAR POT PRODUCTION AND CIRCULATION IN EUROPE AND THE MEDITERRANEAN IN
MEDIEVAL AND POST-MEDIEVAL TIMES .............................................................................................................................................................................326
241
LET THE LEAD CLOTH SEALS SPEAK – THE PRODUCTION, TRADE AND CONSUMPTION OF CLOTH IN MEDIEVAL AND EARLY MODERN
EUROPE ..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................328
243
TIMES OF CHANGE: LATE NEOLITHIC LIFESTYLE AND POPULATION DYNAMICS IN CENTRAL EUROPE .........................................................331
245
WHAT IS A VILLAGE? CHALLENGING CONCEPTS AND METHODS OF IRON AGE AND MEDIEVAL VILLAGES, HAMLETS AND SINGLE
SETTLEMENTS .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................334
247
SEAC 27: FRONTIERS IN THEORY, METHODOLOGY AND EDUCATION WITHIN CULTURAL ASTRONOMY .......................................................341
248
SEAC 27: THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF ASTRONOMY: CONCEPTS OF SPACE AND TIME MATERIALISED IN CULTURES ....................................345
251
THE 4TH M BC IN EUROPE: EXPLORING THE SUPRAREGIONAL ENTANGLEMENTS AS TRIGGERS FOR CULTURAL, SOCIAL AND
ECONOMIC TRANSFORMATIONS ...........................................................................................................................................................................................353
252
IN SEARCH OF CLOUDSTONES*? LITHIC RAW MATERIAL PROCUREMENT IN MOUNTAINOUS AND ALPINE REGIONS DURING THE
MESOLITHIC AND NEOLITHIC ..................................................................................................................................................................................................360
255
PUBLISHING IN INTERNATIONAL, PEER-REVIEWED ACADEMIC JOURNALS............................................................................................................363
257
SPAS: A CULTURAL PHENOMENON IN THE MIRROR OF PRESENT ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH ...............364
259
THE CREATIVE REINTERPRETATION OF MATERIAL CULTURE IN PREHISTORIC SOCIETIES: A REAPPRAISAL ...............................................366
260
DECONSTRUCTION OF PREHISTORIC ECONOMY: VALUE, BARTER AND INTERPRETATION OF NON-MONETARY FINDS IN
ARCHAEOLOGY ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................371
266
A UNITED EUROPE OF THINGS: WAS THERE A COMMON HORIZON OF MATERIAL CULTURE IN THE LATE MEDIEVAL EUROPE? ...........376
268
DISABILITY AND CARE IN MEDIEVAL TIMES: A BIOARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE INTO HEALTH-RELATED PRACTICES ....................378
270
ANIMALS ON THE MOVE: WHEN, HOW AND THE IMPLICATION FOR HUMANS .......................................................................................................385
271
ROCK-CUT ARCHITECTURE: COMMUNITIES, LANDSCAPES AND ECONOMY ..........................................................................................................388
272
CROP HUSBANDRY ACROSS THE IRON AGE AND ROMAN PERIODS: BRINGING TOGETHER THE PICTURE OF HUMAN-CROP
INTERACTION ACROSS EUROPE.............................................................................................................................................................................................393
273
PREVENTIVE ARCHAEOLOGY IN THE POST-MALTA AGE: THE CHALLENGES TO BE FACED ................................................................................396
274
KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER BETWEEN MINING COMMUNITIES .......................................................................................................................................397
279
QUANTIFYING STONE AGE MOBILITY: SCALES AND PARAMETERS ...........................................................................................................................400
280
NEW APPROACHES IN BIOARCHAEOLOGY .........................................................................................................................................................................405
281
SCIENTIFIC DATING AND CENTRAL-WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN PREHISTORY: DEVELOPMENTS AND PERSPECTIVES .......................415
282
NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN THE BIOARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDY OF CREMATED BONE ............................................................................................419
283
EMERGING NODES OF POWER IN IRON AGE EUROPE: THE SEVENTH CENTURY BC .............................................................................................424
284
UNTANGLING THE FINAL PALAEOLITHIC AND EARLY MESOLITHIC IN EUROPE ......................................................................................................428
286
BLADES STILL A BIG DEAL? – LAMINAR TECHNOLOGY IN THE MIDDLE PALAEOLITHIC AND MIDDLE STONE AGE.....................................434
287
ARCHAEOLOGY IN SCHOOLS. INTERNATIONAL APPROACHES IN COMPARISON ..................................................................................................437
288
COMPARATIVE KINGSHIP: THE EARLY MEDIEVAL KINGDOMS OF NORTHERN BRITAIN AND IRELAND IN THEIR EUROPEAN CONTEXT ......
439
289
EUROPEAN ORIGINS AND FADING HERITAGE ....................................................................................................................................................................443
290
LIVING ON THE WATER. THE PILE-DWELLING STRUCTURES BETWEEN HUMAN ACTIVITIES AND THE ENVIRONMENT ...........................445
291
CONTEXTUALIZING ARCHAEOLOGICAL ENGAGEMENT IN THE FIELD, LAB, MUSEUM, AND MEDIA ................................................................449
292
PROCESS OF CHANGE FROM LATE ACHEULEAN TO EARLY MIDDLE STONE AGE / EARLY MIDDLE PALAEOLITHIC IN AFRICA AND
EURASIA .........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................451
293
THE CONSERVATION ARCHAEOLOGY OF DRY STONE MONUMENTS ........................................................................................................................455
295
BETWEEN KINGS, CHIEFTAINS AND SLAVES? NEW WAYS OF TRACING SOCIAL STRATIFICATION IN THE CENTRAL EUROPEAN EARLY
BRONZE AGE.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................457
296
DISCUSSING THE VALUE AND PUBLIC UTILITY OF ARCHAEOLOGY ............................................................................................................................462
301
THE ROLE OF ICAHM IN SUPPORTING ICOMOS AND UNESCO IN THE CONTEXT OF WORLD HERITAGE SITES ............................................464
302
INSIGHTS INTO THE INSIDE. THE CONSTRUCTION OF RAMPARTS AND RELATED QUESTIONS ABOUT A KEY ELEMENT OF PREHISTORIC
FORTIFICATIONS ..........................................................................................................................................................................................................................467
303
BUILDING BLOCKS AND BINDING AGENTS - SOCIAL AND LANDSCAPE IMPACT OF STONE BUILDING IN THE ALPS..................................472
304
ARCHAEOLOGY FOR THE PUBLIC: DEVELOPING MODELS AND TOOLS FOR ASSESSING PUBLIC OUTREACH IN ARCHAEOLOGY ........475
305
ROUNDTABLE CLIMATE CHANGE AND HERITAGE (CCH) ................................................................................................................................................478
307
UNVEILING INVISIBILITY: EXPLORING KNOWLEDGE , INTERDISCIPLINARITY AND IDENTITY THROUGH THE HISTORIES OF
ARCHAEOLOGICAL COLLECTIONS ........................................................................................................................................................................................478
309
LOGISTICS AND NATURAL RESOURCES: UNRAVELLING THE DYNAMICS OF SUPPLY AND TRANSPORTATION OF BULK MATERIALS FOR
CONSTRUCTION PURPOSES ...................................................................................................................................................................................................483
310
THE IMPORTANCE OF FISHING FOR CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE EARLY AND MID HOLOCENE IN NORTHERN EUROPE ...............485
315
FUNERARY PRACTICES IN LATE ROMAN PERIOD AND EARLY MIDDLE AGES..........................................................................................................487
317
CELEBRATING 25 YEARS (EAA25) OF COLLABORATION: HOW ARCHAEOLOGY AND THE EARTH SCIENCES ARE COMING TOGETHER
TO SOLVE REAL-WORLD PROBLEMS....................................................................................................................................................................................492
318
BENDING THE ARC OF HISTORY TO A LOW CARBON FUTURE ......................................................................................................................................496
319
SETTLING AT HIGH ALTITUDES. INTRA-SITE AND INTER-SITE VARIABILITY, SITE FUNCTION AND MOBILITY OF HUNTER-GATHERERS
AND THE FIRST AGRO-PASTORAL SOCIETIES....................................................................................................................................................................498
321
MOUNTAIN AND CITY, NATURE AND HUMAN BEING. A MUTUAL CONDITIONING BETWEEN HUMANS AND LANDSCAPE DURING THE
ROMAN PERIOD ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................................500
322
COLLABORATIVE ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIELDWORK AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN THE DIGITAL WORLD ...............................................503
324
POLITICS OF HERITAGE AND NEW AUTHORITARIANISMS .............................................................................................................................................508
325
CHALLENGING CHANGE: PRACTICAL STRATEGIES FOR HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL COLLABORATION TO COMBAT CLIMATE CHANGE
IN THE HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT ...........................................................................................................................................................................................508
328
MENTORING FOR ARCHAEOLOGISTS (ANNUAL ROUND TABLE OF THE EAA COMMITTEE ON THE TEACHING AND TRAINING OF
ARCHAEOLOGISTS) ....................................................................................................................................................................................................................512
330
UNDERWATER ARCHAEOLOGY IN EUROPE – WHERE DO WE STAND? ......................................................................................................................513
335
‘... IN WITH THE NEW!’ UP AND COMING ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE IN 2019 .....................................................516
336
REACHES OF EMPIRE: HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY AND NEW - GLOBAL - INSIGHTS INTO EUROPEAN EXPANSION ...............................519
337
THE HAPTIC DIMENSION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL OBJECTS ...........................................................................................................................................522
338
SEAC 27: ARCHAEOLOGY AND CULTURAL ASTRONOMY, BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN TRENCH AND SKY..............................................526
339
ETHICS AND PRACTICE IN THE EXCAVATION AND ANALYSIS OF HISTORIC HUMAN REMAINS AND ASSOCIATED CULTURAL MATERIAL..
527
340
BUILDING A FUTURE FOR URBAN ARCHAEOLOGY: THE URBAN ARCHAEOLOGICAL COMMUNITY AT WORK ...............................................530
342
PUBLICLY SPEAKING: THE CHANGING FACE OF PUBLIC ARCHAEOLOGY AND INTERNATIONAL HERITAGE INTERPRETATION, EAA 25 ......
530
343
HERITAGE, CULTURE, IDEOLOGY AND ARCHEOLOGICAL AESTHETICS DURING DICTATORIAL REGIMES IN EUROPE AND AMERICA ...533
344
STUMBLING BLOCK OR COMMON GROUND? THE QUESTION OF STANDARDISATION OF PALAEOLITHIC AND MESOLITHIC LITHIC
ANALYSIS ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................536
346
KNOTTING, TWISTING AND PLAITING: LOOKING FOR DIRECT AND INDIRECT ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCES ............................................537
347
FOOD ECONOMY AND FOODWAYS OF JEWS AND MUSLIMS THROUGH THE AGES – ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSIGHTS ................................540
349
IS ARCHAEOLOGY A CITIZEN-SCIENCE? THE ROLE OF ARCHAEOLOGISTS AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTIONS WITHIN OUR
SOCIETY IN QUESTION ..............................................................................................................................................................................................................544
351
COMMUNITY ARCHAEOLOGY IN EUROPE ...........................................................................................................................................................................546
353
LET’S TALK ABOUT SEX .............................................................................................................................................................................................................550
355
THE POLITICS OF THE ROMAN PAST IN THE 21ST CENTURY .......................................................................................................................................553
356
THE POWER OF THE INVISIBLE. DISCUSSING SOCIAL, POLITICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF TRANSFORMATIONS IN TEXTILE
PRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................................................................................................................555
359
URBANITAS – EXPLORING URBAN WAYS OF LIFE IN THE PAST AND IN THE PRESENT ........................................................................................557
360
IS ARCHAEOLOGY PRACTICAL? ..............................................................................................................................................................................................561
361
RECONNECTING THE INTERPLAY OF FORTIFICATIONS AND RELIGIOUS BUILDINGS WITHIN THEIR LANDSCAPES: CASTLES,
MONASTERIES AND CHURCHES RE-EXAMINED...............................................................................................................................................................565
365
MANAGING (MASS) TOURISM AT HERITAGE ATTRACTIONS (SITES AND MUSEUMS): HOW DO WE BRIDGE THE GAP? ...........................567
366
HISTORY AND PREHISTORY OF SPACE: THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL VIEWPOINT .........................................................................................................569
367
STAIRWAYS TO HEAVEN? MOUNTAINOUS LANDSCAPES AS SPIRITUAL AND RITUAL TOPOGRAPHIES ........................................................572
368
EAA-SAA SPONSORED SESSION: FOSTERING TRANSATLANTIC LINKS TO STRENGTHEN THE PROFESSION AND RELEVANCE OF
ARCHAEOLOGY ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................579
369
RHYTHMS IN MATERIAL CULTURE .........................................................................................................................................................................................580
370
PRESIDENT´S THING 2019: 25 YEARS AFTER..................................................................................................................................................................583
371
TRIAL AND ERROR IN TIMES OF TRANSITION .....................................................................................................................................................................584
374
BABIES, BATHWATERS, WHEELS, AND CHARIOTS: ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF DAVID ANTHONY’S WORK ON EUROPEAN AND
EURASIAN STEPPE PREHISTORY ...........................................................................................................................................................................................587
375
EUROPEAN CRYPT BURIALS - A HERITAGE AT RISK BETWEEN SCIENCE AND PUBLIC DISPLAY.......................................................................592
376
ISLAMICATE ARCHAEOLOGY IN EUROPE.............................................................................................................................................................................597
382
THE PRESENTATION, INTERPRETATION AND CONSERVATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HERITAGE SITES: TRANSNATIONAL,
DIACHRONIC AND MULTIDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES. PART 1 ...............................................................................................................................601
383
THE PRESENTATION, INTERPRETATION AND CONSERVATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HERITAGE SITES: TRANSNATIONAL,
DIACHRONIC AND MULTIDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES. PART 2 ...............................................................................................................................606
384
WRITING GRANTS FOR THE WENNER-GREN FOUNDATION...........................................................................................................................................612
INDEX OF AUTHORS (SESSION ORGANISERS AND MAIN AUTHORS)...................................................................................................................................................615
with other institutions. It will also critique the fundamental limitations when operating in a competitive tendering environment
and the possible ways of addressing fragmentation and competitiveness. In particular it will address the impact of local authorities and government bodies in recommended data capturing methodologies and their adoption or not by commercial units.
This presentation will be based on personal working experience during the last 10 years in the UK and from different posts and
organisations. It will be a personal journey on the fundamental change digital data capture has brought to our field drawing examples from large scale projects, collaborations among companies and institutions.
In addition, this paper will compare data capture and analysis on a company level, company collaboration level and the role of
non-commercial institutions in providing a consensus and common standards.
7
SHARING GEO-SPATIAL CULTURAL HERITAGE LANDSCAPE DATA IN IRELAND: THE OPEN TOPOGRAPHIC
DATA VIEWER
Author(s): Corns, Anthony (The Discovery Programme/CHERISH) - John, Gareth (Department of Culture, Heritage and Gaeltach’s National Parks and Wildlife Service - NPWS) - Keane, Margaret (Department of Culture, Heritage and Gaeltacht’s National Monuments Service - NMS) - Shaw, Robert (The Discovery Programme/CHERISH) - Verbruggen, Koen - Lee, Monica - Carey,
Shane (Geological Survey of Ireland - GSI) - Stanley, Michael - Swan, Ronan (Transport Infrastructure Ireland - TII)
Presentation Format: Oral
Remote sensing data such as geophysics, satellite and Lidar data has revolutionized the prospection, management and visualization of archaeological monuments and landscapes. However this data is expensive and sometime difficult to acquire. Often different organisations sometimes duplicating data collection, which has already occurred in some locations within Ireland.
Organisations will also generally commission data collection campaigns over focused areas for a specific project aims whilst
secondary reuse of the data is often not considered in the original specification.
Over the past 10 years, efforts to improve the sharing and reuse of geo-spatial data within the archaeological and cultural heritage community within Ireland have been developed in order to make best use out of this data. One such initiative is The Open
Topographic Data Viewer project: a collaboration between Geological Survey Ireland (GSI), the Department of Culture, Heritage
and Gaeltacht’s National Monuments Service (NMS) and National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS), Transport Infrastructure
Ireland (TII) and The Discovery Programme: Centre for Archaeology and Innovation Ireland within the remit of the Heritage Council.
The aim of this viewer is to host Lidar from all interested government and non-government organisations and to build up a mosaic
of available data across the country. This high quality topographic data has many applications beyond the original capture focus,
and making them freely available will definitely stimulate new research and improve existing products and techniques.
This paper will explore how this initiative was established, what has been achieved with the roll out of the Open Topographic Data
Viewer within the archaeology community and explores effort in making additional remote sensing data sets available through
initiatives such as ARIADNEPlus, Europeana, CHERISH and E-RIHS.
150
DECOLONISING SPACE
Theme: Archaeological theory and methods beyond paradigms
Organisers: Liceras-Garrido, Raquel (Digital Humanities Hub - History Department, Lancaster University) - Favila-Vázquez,
Mariana (Museo de Templo Mayor, INAH) - Bellamy, Katherine (Digital Humanities Hub - History Department, Lancaster University)
Format: Regular session
Colonial perspectives have dictated many areas of interpretation within the fields of Archaeology, Anthropology and History
since their inception, influencing discourse, terminology and approaches to past and present communities. This perspective
has created imbalances of power between cultures but also between the researcher and ‘the researched’. In recent years, many
voices have emerged which stress the need to question this Western European mainstream discourse, and instead explore
other dynamics and models of thinking which enrich our understandings of societies, rather than continuing to perpetuate colonialist understandings.
Focusing on the concept of space, this session aims to discuss the multitude of ways to ‘be in space’ around the world and
through time, adopting a critical stance to the dominant Cartesian logic. The session welcomes methodologies developed to
explore understandings of space, alongside topics related to: the understanding and conceptualisation of space, relationships
between time-space and kinship-space, local concepts of space, local geographies, social landscapes, spatial materiality, and
textual or pictorial depictions of geographies. These topics are by no means exhaustive, and innovative proposals which are
related to the decolonisation of space in ways we have not mentioned are more than welcome.
140
ABSTRACTS
1
GEOGRAPHICAL DICHOTOMIES IN MESOAMERICAN STUDIES: THE CASE OF INDIGENOUS NAVIGATION
Author(s): Favila Vázquez, Mariana (Museo Templo Mayor, INAH)
Presentation Format: Oral
Archeological studies regarding pre-Hispanic mechanisms of environment appropriation have been crucial to explain the complexity of Mesoamerican societies. However, an ontological dichotomy of water and land has permeated these investigations for
decades. The activities practiced on the mainland, such as agriculture, among many others, are the preferred focus of interest
for explaining indigenous social and historical processes. The activities and the role of the aquatic spaces are generally considered subordinate or secondary concerning the former. Through archaeological, iconographic and historical evidence this paper
argues that Mesoamerican cultures, such as the Olmec, Maya, and Aztec, had a perception of the environment in which, although
water was of course distinguished from the mainland, it was not seen exclusively as an opposite space, liminal and independent to the political, social, economic and religious dynamics of the indigenous people. Evidence of this is the development of a
complex nautical technology that was permeated by the religious and ideological configurations of the societies that produced
it. Consequently, navigation was practiced as a landscape connectivity system that integrated the use of waterways, coastal
lagoons, wetlands, and estuaries, along with roads and activities in the mainland. This study allows for rethinking the valuation of
aquatic spaces and getting closer to the local perception of the environment, in which the aquatic spaces are no longer the limit
of the territories inhabited by humans.
2
REFOCUSING WITH AN INDIGENOUS LENS: THE ALTEPETL IN SIXTEENTH-CENTURY MEXICO
Author(s): Bellamy, Katherine (Digital Humanities Hub - History Department, Lancaster University)
Presentation Format: Oral
The dominance of Western European discourse is not a new phenomenon. Rather, this is a tradition which extends back centuries
and has, as a result, often altered and obscured our understandings of history. This paper will focus on a socio-political entity
which was prevalent in the area we now know as Mexico, which has been variously misinterpreted and misrepresented since the
arrival of the Spanish in the 16th century, namely, the altepetl.
Derived from the Nahuatl yn atl, yn tepetl (“water, mountain”), the two elements deemed essential to any Mesoamerican political
entity, the altepetl was of both philosophical and physical significance in Nahua society. During the early 16th century, the translation of altepetl into Castilian redefined its concept. Altepetl was defined by the Spanish as ‘pueblo’ (town), and huey-altepetl
(great altepetl) as ‘ciudad’ (city). While the Spanish primarily understood ‘altepetl’ as an urban or political concept, it is now known
that Nahua definitions extended to symbolic, aesthetic, ecological and geographical connotations. In the last 20 years, a great
deal of research has been conducted aiming to clarify the concept, but also its original manifestation in the historical and archaeological record. Despite this, the altepetl’s complex nature and intricate transformations has meant that its true conformation
remains ambiguous, with considerable scope for further research.
In this paper, I will explore the different understandings of the altepetl, and how these understandings have often been obscured
by a distinctly Western lens rather than focusing on indigenous knowledge of these entities which were so essential to the functioning of Nahua society. In doing so, I aim to examine the issues associated with employing a strictly Western approach, and,
most importantly, both the necessity and value of centring indigenous knowledge, particularly when investigating indigenous
concepts.
3
ONTOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS ON ILLYRIAN CITIES
Author(s): Bekteshi, Arba (University of Tirana)
Presentation Format: Oral
During my work in Apollonia, Albania with the Franco-Albanian expedition in the summer of 2014, being an anthropologist I had
informed French archaeologists that a bunch of cuboid-shaped structures placed over each other had been thrown from a previous mission like one of the local annual workers had told me. Somewhat relieved the foreign professors returned to me and repeated their concerns like a mantra: ”There is no place in the world similar to Apollonia.” Their concern was based on the fact that
Apollonia’s architecture is difficult to compare to that of any other cities in the region or elsewhere, and hence an impossibility to
translate it and reach exhaustive conclusions on it.
Thus, this presentation focuses on ways to decolonise Albanian archaeology away from Soviet frameworks and to engrave new
engagement spaces with the materiality of the Illyrian urban period in present-day Albanian territories, aware of the need to
move forward with the analytical tools provided by ontology relying on new materialism without any predefined frameworks and
vectors.
This is not to reinforce claims that the proposal to consider the possibility of engaging with relational ontology is the latest fashion that dictates how things operate in a given situation (Alberti et al 2011, 910).
In this paper, focusing on the development and demise of Illyrian cities, I demonstrate that ontology in archaeology presents
the opportunity for producing conditions, such as theory, materials, past, new ones that change. According to Alberti, ontology
141
helps archaeology create a place for open questions, and after each discovery pushes on real changes over how to conceive the
past (2011). Also, the use of ontological approaches in archaeology, while contributing to the meaning of new worlds, does not
participate in the constructs of what did not exist (Alberti et al., 2011, 900).
4
THE WORDS WE USE AND THE INTERPRETATION OF THE PAST: REFLECTIONS ON THE STUDY OF RURAL
SPACES
Author(s): Stagno, Anna Maria (University of Genoa - Laboratory of Environmental Archaeology and History)
Presentation Format: Oral
The paper aims to explore the similarities and the different trajectories of two phenomena which share the same roots: the colonial perspective and the urban dominant consideration of rural areas. The colonialist divide, its idealogical background and its
consequences in the interpretation of the past societies of the colonies have been already acknowledged and the post-colonial
perspective is well established in the archaeological theory. On the contrary, what happened in the interpretation of rural areas
since the late 18th c., with the establishment of the opposition urban/rural world and the human/nature dichotomy is far to be
recognised in all its consequences for the archaeological study and interpretation of our past. The physiographic theories of the
18th c. informed that framework, as well as the rationalisation of the 19th c. and the modernisation of the 20th c. At the same
time, those theories activated the process of ‘folklorisation’ of rural societies, with the underestimation of the local environmental knowledge, the progressive annulment of the local practices of environmental resources management, and the consequent
marginalisation of mountain areas. The current ‘heritagisation’ of mountain areas, promoting their supposed wilderness and
“a-temporality” could be considered the ultimate effect of this process. To change it, archaeology is playing a key role providing a
new historical narrative on mountain areas, however there is urgency for a reflection on the origins and the ideological dimension
of many concepts and words (e.g. the opposition cultivated/uncultivated lands, private property, human impacts, etc.) which
archaeology employs to decipher the rural spaces and societies. Many of them find their codification in the 18th c. theories. The
idea is that the words we use orient our interpretation of the past, and the aim is to show that archaeology needs to decolonise
or, maybe, “de-urbanise” the study of rural areas.
5
DECONSTRUCTING AN IMPERIAL IDEOLOGY – HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE FASCIST
COLONIZATION OF ISTRIA
Author(s): Lorber, Crtomir (University of Ljubljana)
Presentation Format: Oral
Every culture has a distinctive perception of its social environment. We may see this in very tangible differences between spatial
patterns of different cultures in prehistory, antiquity, medieval age and it can also be observed during the industrial revolution,
when the industrial civilization transformed the landscape and spatial patterns of human behaviour. But even in industrial era
there are differences between different societies. The paper plans to analyse a social environment heavily influenced by ideology – Italian fascist mining colony of Raša in Istria, near Labin coal mines.
This paper considers whether it is possible to analyse a fascist colony in archaeological terms. Since such settlements are an
expression of ideology in material world, it should be, as archaeology primarily studies material culture. Any interpretation should
be built upon a clear theoretical basis – we propose that the work of a French philosopher Henry Lefebvre represents such a
foundation. Lefebvre stated that any independent social order builds a unique social space. This is interpreted through the prism
of sensed-thought-felt matrix of spatial understanding that offers a tool for the interpretation of the material incarnations of
ideological foundations of fascism in material culture.
The paper offers a specific viewpoint when dealing with the question of decolonization and deconstruction of ideological narratives. Fascism has represented itself as a social revolution and its’ conceptualization of space should be unique and different
from other industrial societies. This paper maintains it is not. It shows that fascist colonial practices are similar to other industrial societies; especially since it closest analogies are found in other industrial settlements found near factories and mines. As
such it offers a thesis that any uniqueness of fascist colonies is to be considered as a specific variation of European industrial
colonialism and not as an unique type of Western colonialism.
6
DIGGING FOR THE DICTATOR: HISTORICIZING EXCAVATION SITES
Author(s): Wirth, Christa (University of Agder)
Presentation Format: Oral
In this paper, I will discuss the excavation site as a space that needs to be historicized. By means of historical-critical analysis, I
will look at archaeological sites in the post-World War Two period in the Philippines. In this time excavation sites in the Philippines
became locations of great public resonance as they provided Philippine society access to a history that was untouched by the
Spanish and U.S. Empires that colonized the Philippines for 350 years. The Philippines did not become independent until 1946.
The excavation sites, as I will argue, became national landmarks where decolonization took place. However, U.S. influence and
anxieties over the spread of communism in Asia, and Philippine nationalist efforts resulted in archaeologists providing ideological support for Ferdinand Marcos’ dictatorship. The excavation sites became symbols of Marcos’ power. Thus, the interpretation
of the excavation site as contested space unfolds at the nexus of decolonization, nationalism, and the Cold War.
142
A.
REINTERPRETING THE LANDSCAPE OF THE BELL BEAKER PHENOMENON IN THE INNER IBERIA
Author(s): Paulos Bravo, Rodrigo (Complutense University of Madrid)
Presentation Format: Poster
The study of the landscape of the inner Iberia during the Calcolithic period has never been a priority in previous studies, let alone
its importance in the appearance of the Bell Beaker phenomenon among the Copper Age societies. Through spatial analysis we
could reinterpret the relationship between these societies and the landscape, getting to know better their idiosyncrasies and
the nature of the observed phenomena inside them. The present work shows the preliminary results of the landscape analysis
that is being carried out currently in the Bell Beaker sites of the territory included in the Henares’ upper basin (Guadalajara, Spain)
and Ambrona Valley (Soria, Spain). In doing so, we intend to deconstruct the phenomenon and get better knowledge about the
structure that underlies it. Mobility, relationships between groups and the exploitation of critical resources could be important
keys to help comprehend how those people perceived the physical space, creating a landscape that can only be understood
through such a detailed study.
152
APPROACHING HEALTH STATUS, HEALTH CARE AND PEOPLE’S WELLBEING IN THE PAST FROM A
DENTAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
Theme: Interpreting the archaeological record: artefacts, humans and landscapes
Organisers: Kolp-Godoy Allende, Maria (Department of Archaeology, Prehistoric Archaeology Division, University of Zurich) López Onaindia, Diego (Unitat d’Antropologia Biològica. Departament BABVE. Facultat de Biociències, Universitat Autònoma
de Barcelona)
Format: Regular session
Teeth are hard and tough! They are the best-preserved tissue and source of information about people’s lives, encounters, and
interactions in archaeology.
As they develop throughout an individual’s life, different nutritional and physiological disturbances affecting health from childhood, leave permanent traces on the individual’s teeth. Once teeth have formed, they are prone to modifications resulting from
attrition, intentional alterations, and pathological conditions. Consequently, the assessment of dental markers, pathologies, and
biochemical analysis of dental tissues provides insights into the episodes of disruption, pathological susceptibility and epidemiological events that a population endures over a specific period.
Undoubtedly the analysis of teeth has undergone extensive transformations during the last decade. New options arise from
advances in analytical dental histology and biochemistry, such as the introduction of DNA analysis of pathogens preserved in
oral tissues, improving the accuracy of applied techniques and results, and pushing forward previous analytical limitations, particularly our own research questions. These have evolved from mere dental pathological characterizations towards a more comprehensive understanding of health status and care of studied populations.
This session seeks to integrate a variety of dental studies following this holistic approach to infer health status and well-being
in past populations by integrating dental studies combining diverse methodological approaches and sources of information. To
integrate dental studies that provide insights into biological, sociocultural and behavioral components, and a picture of people’s
daily lives, involving health care, healing strategies and people’s attitudes towards diseases.
You are welcome to present outcomes of recent research, methodological improvements or experimental studies. Case studies,
comparative studies, overviews, uni- and multidisciplinary research papers are also welcome! We are pleased to discuss methodological and theoretical challenges in working with teeth, the somewhat hidden role of health care in past societies, and the
potential for it to be traced through the analysis of teeth.
ABSTRACTS
1
INTRODUCTION TO SESSION #152: APPROACHING HEALTH STATUS, HEALTH CARE AND PEOPLE’S
WELLBEING IN THE PAST FROM A DENTAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
Author(s): Kolp-Godoy Allende, Maria (Department of Prehistoric Archaeology, University of Zurich) - López Onaindia, Diego
(Unitat d’Antropologia Biològica. Departament BABVE. Facultat de Biociències, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
Presentation Format: Oral
To understand the concept of health and healthcare is more complicated than what is commonly thought, as the definition of
health embraces many dimensions and methodological approaches in itself (Wiley and Allen 2009). For the WHO health is a
state of complete physical, psychological, and social well-being, and the functional ability to operate under changing circumstances (Whitaker 2006:2, Winkelman 2009). Healthcare is understood as the act to provide medical treatments and medicines
to improve a person’s well-being (BD 2019). However, this sense of well-being and healthcare varies over time and between
societies (Wiley and Allen 2009). From a biocultural approach, the notion of health emphasizes the individual’s ability to recover
from insult, as part of a continuous process of adjustment to environmentally adverse situations (Bush and Zvelebil 1991). While
bioarchaeology appeals for a holistic notion of health and care. It integrates biocultural and environmental factors to comprehend the general health status of a population to which an individual belongs, without discrediting the importance of differential
143
Index of Authors
(SESSION ORGANISERS AND MAIN AUTHORS)
SESSION
A
SESSION
SESSION
Antonelli, Giacomo
321
Bas, Marlon
280
Anvari, Jana
322
Basile, Martina
201
315
Baskova, Varvara
382
365
Aamodt, Christina
164
Aparaschivei, Danut
Acero Pérez, Jesús
200
Arias-Ferrer, Laura
287
Basu, Asmita
241
Arjona, Manuel
181
Basu, Durga
Armbruster, Barbara
295
Bates, Jessica
125
Armstrong Oma, Kristin
356
Bauer, Anna
172
Affolter, Jeanne
237
Arnold, Bettina
374
Baum, Tilman
218
Afonso, Marisa
307
Arranz Otaegui, Amaia
Ahmad, Tarek
171
Arrizabalaga, Alvaro
344
Bausch, Ilona
Ahmadinezhad, Sahar
293
Artursson, Magnus
251
Beamer, Jennifer
133
Aitchison, Kenneth
111
Arzelier, Ana
76
Beck, Anna
296
Akerman, Anastasia
318
Asinmaz, Alper
43
Beck, Malene
289
Ackermann, Rahel
Adams, Sophia
Adroit, Stéphanie
Al Najjar, Mustafa
Alaica, Aleksa
Albarella, Umberto
156, 209
60
Baumanova, Monika
Aspoeck, Edeltraud
210
Bédécarrats, Samuel
270
Aston, Alexander
109
Bedin, Edoardo
128, 270
Åstveit, Leif Inge
252
Beek, Roy
173
Bejenaru, Luminita
286, 383
39
238
197
171, 216
268
291, 365
289
280, 347
Alberti, Marta
349
Atanasoska, Nevenka
Alcantara-Garcia, Jocelyn
133
Attema, Peter
229
Bekteshi, Arba
181
Atzbach, Rainer
185
Belford, Paul
Austin, Anne
322
Beliaev, Leonid
198
Bellamy, Katherine
150
Bellia, Angela
184
Bellucci, Nikola
200
Aleotti, Nadia
Alexander, Michelle
55
210
Autiero, Serena
Allen, Caitlin
177
Avramova, Mariya
Almushawah, Munirah
248
Axelsen, Irmelin
272
Aydingun, Sengul
Alpay, Ayse
248
Ayers Rigsby, Sara
Alterauge, Amelie
375
Alfsdotter, Clara
Alonso, Natàlia
Altschul, Jeff
296
Alusik, Tomas
164
73, 174
43
325
Belmonte Avilés, Juan Antonio
Belyaev, Leonid
Ben Brahim, Oumeyma
B
Alves - Ferreira, Joana
360
Babić, Staša
Amaro, Alessio
268
Baca, Martin
156
Bachhuber, Christoph
Amundsen, Marie
164, 257
Beneteaud, Lucie
171
69, 295
43
150
95, 340
376
248
376, 383
382
218, 279
Benetti, Francesca
351
Bengtsson, Marie
155
Benz, Marion
76
Berg, Ingrid
73
Bácsmegi, Gábor
218
Berg, Ria
270
Baioni, Marco
290
Bergerbrant, Sophie
169
Andersson Strand, Eva
155
Baker, Christine
351
Berg-Hansen, Inger Marie
284
Andreaki, Vasiliki
178
Balbi, Jose
184, 302
Berikashvili, David
382
291, 365
Berkelbach, Janneke
304
Anders, Alexandra
Anders, Dominic
76
140, 200
Andrianou, Demi
140
Balco, William
Andriiovych, Marta
239
Baldoni, Marica
Anfinset, Nils
337
Ballmer, Ariane
259
Berndt, Ulrike
Angeletaki, Alexandra
349
Banck-Burgess, Johanna
225
Berzins, Valdis
Angliker, Erica
184
Banerjea, Rowena
Besse, Marie
383
Aniceti, Veronica
347
Baraliu, Sedat
209
Bethard, Jonathan
268
Anisovets, Yulia
201
Barber, John
293
Biehl, Peter F
315
Barbosa, Helena
360
Biermann, Felix
361
Biliaieva, Svitlana
376
Bilotti, Giacomo
128
Annaert, Rica
Anthony, David
90, 374
Antolin, Ferran
60, 157
Antonella, Coralini
200
Baron, Justyna
Barone, Pier Matteo
Barth, Theodor
268
55
125, 371
169
366, 369
Bernardini, Sara
Bizri, Melinda
46
43
310, 346
305, 322
55
SESSION
Blackwood, Alexander
Blaich, Markus C.
292
185
Blazheska, Zlata
133
Blažková, Tereza
94
199
Bleicher, Niels
178, 239
Blinkhorn, James
344, 382
Bobrowski, Przemyslaw
Bocquentin, Fanny
Byszewska, Agata
330, 365
301, 361
Blaževicius, Povilas
Blažková, Gabriela
SESSION
85
85, 88
C
Cadamarteri, Julian
Callanan, Martin
Calvo Gómez, Jorge
Campbell, Eve
Campbell, Liam
202
336, 367
238
121, 208
SESSION
Chevassu, Valentin
39
Chidimuro, Blessing
280
Chidiroglou, Maria
181
Chikunova, Irina
346
Chipping, Ewan
172
Chowdhury, Annabelle
383
Chowne, Peter
217
Christie, Heather
335
351
Christie, Shaheen
76
Campion, Nicholas
248
Chrupek, Sebastian
Boethius, Adam
289
Canavas, Constantin
271
Chrysovitsanou, Vasiliki
109
Boisseuil, Didier
257
Canino, Dario
321
Chu, Wei
238
Boldyreva, Ekaterina
382
376
Cano i Cano, Nit
164
Ciampagna, María Laura
346
Boloti, Tina
133, 140
Capek, Ladislav
94
Cianciosi, Alessandra
336
Bonacchi, Chiara
174, 179
Caracuta, Valentina
60
Ciesielski, Elsa
Borderie, Quentin
55, 81
Bors, Corina Ioana
283, 383
Bortolami, Fiorenza
76
Carboni, Romina
162
Citter, Carlo
Carmignani, Leonardo
286
Cobb, Matthew
Carrer, Francesco
16, 199
Botwid, Katarina
337
Carrero-Pazos, Miguel
Bouissac, Paul
366
Cartwright, Rachel
Bouquin, denis
210
Carvajal Lopez, Jose
376
325
Colominas, Lídia
27, 168
Colorado, Apela
Bourbou, Chryssi
268, 280
Carvalho, Aline
Bouwmeester, Jeroen
202, 340
Carver, Martin
27
Boytner, Ran
322
Casalini, Elena
179
Böhm, Sebastian
225
Casimiro, Tania
Bradley, Guy
359
Caspari, Gino
Brami, Maxime
Brancelj, Ana
90
301
90, 209
91
369
180, 307
Cooney, Gabriel
252
Coralini, Antonella
200
Cornelissen, Marcel
252, 319
94, 361
Corns, Anthony
144, 325
114, 217
Cosic, Natalija
177
303
Coso Alvarez, Júlia
240
Castillo, Alicia
301
Cousseau, Florian
293
321
Crescenzi, Nicole
339
107, 351
Castoldi, Maurizio
Brandl, Michael
237, 252
Čaval, Saša
Breyer, Francis
Coltofean-Arizancu, Laura
198
Cassitti, Patrick
Brandenburgh, Chrystel
Breukel, Tom
Collis, John Ralph
217
280
16, 17
216
Cave, Christine
39, 336
268
Črešnar, Matija
114, 209, 302
Criado-Boado, Felipe
338, 368, 370
43
Cavers, Graeme
375
Cecconi, Niccolò
Bricking, Adelle
210
Cechura, Martin
Brindzaite, Ruta
359
Celhar, Martina
Broch, Mathias
228
Celma Martínez, Mireia
Broka-Lace, Zenta
343
Centi, Laura
279
Curca, Roxana-Gabriela
367
Brownrigg, Gail
374
Cep, Berrin
286
Currás, Andrés
382
Brezinova, Helena
290, 293
162
241, 361
173
346, 376
Crielaard, Jan Paul
181
Cringaci Tiplic, Maria
315
Cristofaro, Ilaria
248
Croll, Kathryn
174
Cucart-Mora, Carolina
284
Brozio, Jan Piet
251
Cereda, Susanna
Brozou, Anastasia
280
Cerevková, Alžbeta
260
Cvjeticanin, Tatjana
Brönnimann, David
81
Ceruti, Maria Constanza
367
Cvrcek, Jan
199
Cwalinski, Mateusz
173
Czapski, Maciej
212
81
Brunetti, Ester
169
Cesarini, Roxanne
Brunner, Mirco
295
Chang, Claudia
Buhlke, Anja
201
Charalambidou, Polyxeni (Xenia)
181
Bukkemoen, Grethe
193
Charnot, Marie
251
Bulas, Jan
367
Chatterjee, Anustup
191
Burgert, Pavel
216
Chatzidimitriou, Athina
181
Burke, Ariane
317
Chatzikonstantinou, Katerina
Burkhardt, Laura
173
Chaukin, Sergey
Chernysheva, Elena
Chevallier, Barbara
Busset, Anouk
Buxeda i Garrigós, Jaume
288, 335
240
208, 374
Curtis, Mandi
D
280
177, 355
76
Dahlström, Hanna
359
343
Dalen, Elin
305
302
Danielisova, Alzbeta
199
Danilova, Anna
200
174
Daravigka, Klea
171
90, 191
SESSION
SESSION
SESSION
Daroczi, Tibor
125, 198
Doyle, Ian
351
Favila-Vázquez, Mariana
150
Davies, Mairi
318, 325
Drath, Joanna
169
Fecher, Franziska
228
Davis, Basil
317
Drummer, Clara
201
Fedorina, Anastasia
Dawson, Tom
325
Drzewiecki, Mariusz
202
Feeser, Ingo
218
Ducati, Fabrizio
162
Feito, Jessica
272
De Franceschini, Marina
247, 248
39, 268
de Groot, Mara
107
Duckworth, Chloe
376
Fernandez Espinosa, Antoni
57
de Jong, Ursula
73
Dumont, Léonard
191
Fernández Fernández, Jesús
39
de la Torre, Ignacio
292
Dunning, Cynthia
301
Fernández-Götz, Manuel
209
De Luca, Gianna
162
Dunning, Ellinor
349
Ferrero, Lewis
133
De Mulder, Guy
209
Durand, Raphaël
76
filippi, antonino
271
Fleming, Arlene
177, 325
de Neef, Wieke
de Raad, Jesper
De Simone, Daniela
229
Durczak, Kinga
383
174, 177
Duval, Mélanie
73, 174
Florenzano, Assunta
128
367
Dworsky, Cyril
66, 201
De Vivo, Caterina
68, 365
de Waal, Maaike
107, 216
Debert, Jolene
Flyen, Anne-Cathrine
325
Dyer, Joanne
133
Fogliazza, Silvia
367
Dzhanfezova, Tanya
371
Fontana, Federica
213, 319
Forrestal, Colin
107, 178
259
Deckers, Pieterjan
27
E
Foster, Sally
73
Deicke, Aline
125
Del Vais, Carla
162
Delaney, Liam
335
Eberschweiler, Beat
330
Förster, Till
239
Delencre, Florent
309
Ebert, Julia
322
Frank, Roslyn
233
Della Casa, Philippe
46, 199
Ebersbach, Renate
157, 239
Fouriaux, François
201
Foxhall Forbes, Helen
229
Ebrahimiabareghi, Setareh
359
Franklin, Kathryn
208
Demant, Ida
155
Eckmeier, Eileen
228
FRANZ, INGMAR
225
Demoule, Jean-Paul
273
Edinborough, Kevan
251
Fras, Mojca
Denk, Olivia
181
Edinborough, Marija
280
Fredengren, Christina
177
Derenne, Eve
239
Egea Vivancos, Alejandro
287
Fredheim, Harald
177
66
Deschler-Erb, Eckhard
228
Eilertsen, Krister
252
Frieman, Catherine
Deschler-Erb, Sabine
172
Elbl, Martin Malcolm
336
Fries, Jana
208
Di Giuseppe, Helga
162
Elkina, Irina
359
Fritzl, Michaela
125
Di Michele, Dario
Diachenko, Aleksandr
162
Emery-Barbier, Aline
203, 239, 279
Engovatova, Asya
Díaz, Ana
307
Enqvist, Johanna
Díaz-Andreu, Margarita
307
Epimakhov, Andrey
85
343, 375
73
374
Diaz-Guardamino Uribe, Marta
90
Erkske, Aija
Díaz-Zorita Bonilla, Marta
90
Ernée, Michal
295
Ertl, John
301
Escoriza-Mateu, Trinidad
196
Dielemans, Linda
Dikkaya, Fahri
304
355, 376
76
69
Frumin, Suembikya
172
Fuchs, Michel
321
Fuerst, Sebastian
Fulminante, Francesca
Furholt, Martin
Furtwängler, Anja
G
191
356, 359
69, 239
243
Dimitrov, Zdravko
271
Escribano-Ruiz, Sergio
Dittmar, Jenna
268
Espinet, Ariadna
270
Gál, Szilárd
152
Eusgeld, Irene
216
Galliker, Julia
133
Djouad, Sélim
76
16
Dlamini, Nonhlanhla
152
Evans, Nicholas
288
Gallinaro, Marina
Dobrovolskaya, Maria
172
Evgenyev, Andrey
251
Gamarra, Agustín
383
Dodd, James
315
Gameiro, Cristina
284
Dods, Roberta Robin
366, 369
Dolbunova, Ekaterina
142, 330
F
Ganiatsou, Elissavet
Gao, Qian
Dolfini, Andrea
46
Fabijanic, Tomislav
315
Garcea, Elena
Donnelly, Colm
351
Fadda, Salvatore
343
Garcia, Marcos
D'Orlando, Dario
162
Faragó, Norbert
213, 284
Douglas, Diane
325
Farinetti, Emeri
229
Douglas, Gavin
293
Farrujia de la Rosa, Jose
Douze, Katja
292
Fasanella Masci, Marianna
57
181
Garcia Casas, David
74
97
174
85
172, 347
199
García-Contreras Ruiz, Guillermo 55, 347
García-García, Marcos
55
Garcia-Quintela, Marco
248
SESSION
Garcia-Ventura, Agnès
307
Gardela, Leszek
168, 259
SESSION
SESSION
Graber-Pesonen, Joëlle
191
Havard, Hegdal
335
Graham, Ellie
325
Hayden, M.
233
Gardner, Andrew
171
Gralak, Tomasz
260
Hedenstierna-Jonson, Charlotte
Garstki, Kevin
322
Gramsch, Alexander
280
Heeren, Stijn
Gassend, Jean-Loup
169
Grau-Sologestoa, Idoia
Gattiglia, Gabriele
94, 322
172, 347
Heilmann, Daniela
155
175, 212
173
Gregory, David
330
Heinonen, Tuuli
247
Greiner, Martina
282
Heinrich, Frits
272
Gavranovic, Mario
173
Grimm, Sonja
213, 279, 284, 344
Heitz, Caroline
237, 239, 251
Geary, Kate
328
Gronenborn, Detlef
178, 239
Helamaa, Maija
Gebauer, Anne Birgitte
251
Groß, Daniel
289, 344
Held, Julia
Gerber, Yvonne
237
Gross, Eda
142
Heller, Frederic
Gerling, Claudia
228
Groucutt, Huw
292
Hellmuth Kramberger, Anja
Germanidou, Sophia
271
Grömer, Karina
66, 133, 375
Gernez, Guillaume
259
Gruszczynska-Ziólkowska, Ewa
Gautschy, Rita
Gfeller, Frank
237
184
245, 335
94
257
383
173, 295
Henderson, A Gwynn
287
Hendy, Jessica
322
Guaggenti, Alessandro
81
Hernández-Ojeda, María
Gheorghiu, Dragos
366, 369
Guba, Szilvia
76
Herrero-Corral, Ana
76
Giagkoulis, Tryfon
142, 290
Gubler, Regula
Heyd, Volker
90
Giannakos, Konstantinos
43
Giannattasio, Bianca Maria
162
Giannini, Nicoletta
Giannitrapani, Enrico
27, 142
128, 229, 271
Giglio, Marco
Giguet-Covex, Charline
162
91
Guermandi, Maria Pia
Guillon, Mark
199, 309
273
76
Higginbottom, Gail
Hildebrand, Elisabeth
57
247, 251
85
Gullberg, Steven
247
Hingley, Richard
179, 355
Gulli, Domenica
281
Hinton, Peter
234, 368
Gupta, Sunil
198
Hinz, Martin
81
Hlad, Marta
Gur-Arieh, Shira
178, 218, 237
76
Giles, Melanie
156
Gurova, Maria
371
Hofmann, Daniela
Girotto, Chiara
203
Guseva, Anastasia
304
Hofmann, Kerstin
175
Giuman, Marco
162
Gutierrez, Lucia
383
Høgseth, Harald
337
Given, Michael
184
Hohle, Isabel
239
Gjerpe, Lars Erik
245
Glazunova, Olga
369
Gleeson, Patrick
288, 315
Gleich, Philipp
H
Habinger, Sophie
251
Haddow, Scott
Glinski, Radoslaw
359
Hafner, Albert
Godfrey, Evelyne
74, 114
Holbrook, Jarita
Hølleland, Herdis
270
88
251, 295
Holmes, Matilda
Holtorf, Cornelius
Honegger, Matthieu
Haggren, Georg
241
Hong, Jong Ha
69, 157
247
69, 73, 174
172
171, 177
85
280
Gomes, Francisco
360
Haines, Julia
336
Horwitz, Liora
347
Gomes, Sergio
360
Hajdas, Irka
114
Hostettler, Marco
201
Hoxha, Zana
198
Gomes Coelho, Rui
Gonzalez Alaña, Ian
González Soutelo, Silvia
González-García, Antonio César
324, 360
76
Gori, Maja
Górkiewicz Downer, Abigail
Halbrucker, Éva
257
Hall, Derek
233,
Hall, Mark
248, 388
Goodwin, Karl
Hajnal, Ivo
212
46, 173
Halldórsdóttir, Hrafnhildur
Hanning, Erica
Hanscam, Emily
43
238
94
Högberg, Anders
Hristova, Ivanka
177
157, 272
185, 288
Hruby, Karolina
237
Huang, Angela
371
241
274
Huber, Renata
142
Huber, Sandrine
181
272
Hudson, Mark
198
245
Hueglin, Sophie
303, 382
296, 382
Huffer, Damien
114
69, 355
335
Hansen, Annette
Gottardi, Corina
237
Hansen, Jesper
Goulart, Luana
353
Hanson, John
Goumas, Akis
337
Hanussek, Benjamin
383
Hurcombe, Linda
225
85
Harabasz, Katarzyna
88
Hussain, Shumon
193, 286
Gourichon, Lionel
Govedarica, Blagoje
173
Harten-Buga, Hella
Gowen Larsen, Margaret
301
Göhring, Andrea
280
Grøn, Ole
142, 284
169
Huysecom, Eric
85
Hartford, Samantha
174
Hyttinen, Marika
359
Hasselin Rous, Isabelle
140
Haue, Niels
245
SESSION
I
Iacono, Francesco
46, 324
SESSION
K
Kairiss, Andris
SESSION
Kolp-Godoy Allende, Maria
152
Kombolias, Mary
280
114
Konstantinidou, Sonia
133
365
Iaia, Cristiano
281
Kalafatic, Hrvoje
125
Koren, Zvi
Ibsen, Timo
302
Kalliga, Eleni
169
Kosta, Elissavet
Ikiz Kaya, Deniz
107, 179
Kallio-Seppä, Titta
339, 375
Kourkoulakos, Antonios
94
43
Ilves, Kristin
351
Kalnins, Marcis
284
Kovacik, Joseph
Imbach, Marta
229
Kaltsogianni, Styliani
366
Koval, Vladimir
241, 376
322
Kovalev, Vasily
201
Innocenti, Dario
Inskip, Sarah
Iovino, Maria Rosa
Islanova, Inna
Ismail-Meyer, Kristin
Istrate, Daniela Veronica
Istratii, Romina
Ivanov, Georgi
121, 210
268
238
94
81, 290
361
74
125
Kansa, Sarah
Kapustka, Katarína
Karabaich, Kassandra
Karczewska, Malgorzata
Karg, Sabine
142
85
Kowarik, Kerstin
91, 142, 274
343
Köstner, Barbara
133
245
Kraese, Jeannette
133, 251
95
Kramberger, Bine
173
353
Karivieri, Arja
200
Kranzbühler, Johanna
Kars, Eva
309
Krapf, Tobias
266
Krasinski, Kathryn
199
217
Kars, Mirjam
173, 181
Ivanova, Maria
173
Karski, Kamil
383
Krasnikova, Anna
Iwaniszewski, Stanislaw
247
Kashina, Ekaterina
310
Krause, Johannes
243
Krauss, Rolf
233
Izeta, Andres
175
Kasten, Megan
J
Jäggi, Carola
Kakob, Bastien
Jameson, John H
383
197, 335
280
Kristiansen, Kristian
Kaul, Flemming
259
Kristiansen, Søren
Kavruk, Valerii
274
Krmnicek, Stefan
144
Kroon, Erik
374
Kroonen, Guus
374
Katsimicha, Maria
Kazakov, Vladislav
85
Keil, Jessica
295
342
Kelder, Jorrit
43
Jammet-Reynal, Loïc
251
Kempf, Michael
Jansen, Richard
107
Kerr, Sarah
203
55, 202
90, 260
107, 383
212
Kruse, Kristin
201
Kucharik, Milan
322
Kuhn, Laura
168
Jarockis, Romas
302
Kharobi, Arwa
152
Kuijpers, Maikel
Jarosz, Pawel
295
Khatsenovich, Arina
286
Kulenovic, Igor
Jaskulska, Elzbieta
282
Khokhlov, Alexandr
361
Kuleshov, Viacheslav
260
81
Kulkov, Alexander
191
185, 302
Kulkova, Marianna
94, 371
212, 303
Kunnas, Liisa
Jaworska, Maria
Jecker, David
162
Khokhlova, Olga
142
Khomiakova, Olga
Jelicic, Anna
168
Kienzle, Peter
Jeney, Rita
307
Killen, Geoffrey
Jensen, Anne
318
Kim, Geon Young
Jerbic, Katarina
290
King, Anthony
140
172, 383
347
Jervis, Ben
197, 266
Klecha, Aleksandra
Jessen, Mads
245, 288
Kleijne, Jos
90, 295
Kloekhorst, Alwin
43, 374
Jesus, Ana
60
Jinadasa, Uditha
107
Johnson, Andrew
27, 142
Johnson, James
Jones, Emily Lena
Jones, Rebecca
208, 283, 374
342
212, 291
173
Kurila, Laurynas
185
Kümmel, Martin Joachim
374
Kvetina, Petr
239
L
216
Laabs, Julian
121
Labbas, Vincent
91, 199
216
Laciak, Dagmara
125
Knight, David
Knippenberg, Sebastiaan
Knockaert, Juliette
240
Knutsson, Kjel
Knüsel, Christopher
74
Kunze, Rene
Knaf, Alice
288
76, 85
307
225
Jones, Samantha
Jórdeczka, Maciej
383
Klügl, Johanna
Jones, Richard
Joosten, Ineke
213, 251
191, 260
91
284
88, 268
Lahelma, Antti
Lakshminarayanan, Ashwini
218, 295
81
198
Lamesa, Anaïs
271
367
Koch, Jacky
303
Lange, Perry
Koch, Julia Katharina
295
Langner, Martin
175
310
Lanzicher, Andrea
185
Larsson, Lars
142
László, Orsolya
169
Jouttijärvi, Arne
191
Koivisto, Satu
Jovanovic, Ivana
172
Kolar, Jan
Jungnickel, Katharina
251
Kolistrkoska Nasteva, Irena
218, 239
259
SESSION
Lattard, Alexia
SESSION
SESSION
76
Lucas, Gavin
16
Lawrence, Andrew
212
Lucci, Enrico
46, 128
Lazar-Radus, Catalin Alexandru
228
Luciañez Triviño, Miriam
156
Mathieu, Jon
367
Lazzari, Marisa
319
Luebke, Harald
310
Mathis, Christian
287
Lupuwana, Vuyiswa
349
Matic, Uros
Luyt, Julie
270
Mattioli, Tommaso
184
Lyon, Christopher
317
Matveeva, Natalia
233
May, Keith
175
Le Roy, Mélie
Leander, Anne-Marie
Leck, Arthur
Lee, Gyoung-Ah
Legge, Michael
76
200
46
60
210
Lemorini, Cristina
88, 286
Lengyel, Dominik
66, 296
Lerma Guijarro, Alma
Leskovar, Tamara
Levanova, Elena
Lévy Contreras, Jessica
M
Masson-MacLean, Edouard
288
Massy, Ken
295
Mayfield, Andrew
109, 180
39
Mayor, Anne
346
Machacek, Jiri
185
Mazackova, Jana
237
171, 360
Maeder, Stefan
382
Mazarakis Ainian, Alexandros
181
97, 125, 282
Magdic, Andrej
245
Mazis, Matasha
191
383
Magnusson, Gert
309
McAlister, Grace
351
152
Maijanen, Heli
339
McClain, Aleksandra
Lewis, Carenza
39, 351
Mainberger, Martin
142
McClatchie, Meriel
Lewis, Michael
27, 266
Maixner, Birgit
142
McGrath, Ann
27
60, 272
193
Li, Hao
292
Majorek, Magdalena
121, 375
McKeague, Peter
144
Liceras-Garrido, Raquel
150
Makhortykh, Sergey
283
Mckenzie, Catriona
268
Liczbińska, Grażyna
125
Makino, Kumi
322
McLaughlin, Rowan
281
Lien, Lauren
114
Malik, Rose
280
Mech, Anna
196
Lima, Leilane
360
Malovoz, Andreja
259
Mednikova, Maria
Linaa, Jette
241
Malyutina, Anna
310
Megale, Carolina
351, 365
Lindell, Satu
245
Mamin, Yann
245
Meier, Thomas
171, 382
Lindstrom, Torill Christine
369
Manders, Martijn
330
164
Meignen, Liliane
292
90
Mandescu, Dragos
213, 283
Mele, Marko
283
Link, Thomas
251
Mandich, Matthew
Lipkin, Sanna
76, 241, 339
Ling, Johan
Lisowska, Ewa
199, 367
Lisowski, Mik
347
Liston, Maria
76
355, 382
Meling, Trond
245
Manen, Claire
157
Melko, Nadja
337
Manfrini, Marcelo
198
Meller, Harald
295
Mangado Llach, Xavier
319
Melo, Linda
Mangani, Claudia
290
Meneghetti, Francesca
280
Menghini, Cristina
Liu, Chang
293
Mannino, Marcello
Liudmila, Lbova
109
Marangou, Christina
259, 271
172
Marciniak, Arkadiusz
39, 322
Livarda, Alexandra
Liveri, Angeliki
Liwosz, Chester
Lo Russo, Sarah
Lodwick, Lisa
140, 184
184
81
272, 296
Menne, Julia
90
259
94
237
Menshikov, Maxim
169
Margaritis, Evi
60
Mentesana, Roberta
240
Marik, Jan
27
Messal, Sebastian
302
Markus, David
347
Messana, Chiara
Marreiros, João
238
Metzner-Nebelsick, Carola
91
283
Loeffelmann, Tessi
282
Marshall, Sinead
Meyer, Christian
169
Loftus, James
371
Martens Vandrup, Vibeke
305
Miazga, Beata
191
Lomsdalen, Tore
233
Martin, Lucie
157
Micarelli, Ileana
268
Longhitano, Gabriella
133
Martín Jarque, Sergio
Lopez Garcia, Antonio
355
Martín López, David
152
Martin Seijo, Maria
López Onaindia, Diego
Lorber, Crtomir
150, 343
Martinelli, Nicoletta
Lorenzon, Marta
179
Martins, Ana Cristina
Lozano, Marina
152
Martz de la Vega, Hans
Loze, Ilse Biruta
243
Marx, Amala
Lozovskaya, Olga
213
Masek, Zsófia
Lösch, Sandra
243
Masriera-Esquerra, Clara
Lu, Liu
94
Massetti, Laura
39, 325
279, 284
343
156, 346
290
307, 360
Mickleburgh, Hayley
210
Miclon, Valentin
268
Mientjes, Antoon
128
Migliavacca, Mara
356
Migliorati, Luisa
321
248
Milella, Marco
349
Miller Bonney, Emily
169
Milosavljevic, Monika
171
Mimokhod, Roman
169
Minkevicius, Karolis
172
174, 180
374
88
156, 171
SESSION
SESSION
SESSION
Mino, Martin
271
Nenova, Denitsa
173
Öhrman, Magdalena
133
Misterek, Kathrin
175
Nessel, Bianka
191
Özdemir, Zeynep
201
Mittnik, Alissa
280
Neumann, Daniel
259
Mizoguchi, Koji
193
Neupert, Mark
107
Mocci, Florence
91
Nevell, Michael
121, 351
152, 353
Moderato, Marco
367
Nicklisch, Nicole
Modl, Daniel
260
Nicolis, Franco
Moeller, Katharina
328, 351
P
Paladino, Vincent
369
339
Palestrina, Daniel
383
Niculescu, Gheorghe Alexandru
171
Palet, Josep Maria
199
Moghaddam, Negahnaz
169
Niebylski, Jakub
337
Palincas, Nona
208
Mohr, Franziska
144
Nielsen, Ebbe
284
Palmieri, Lilia
Moilanen, Ulla
339
Nielsen, Svein
157, 289
Moisio, Jussi
Mokkelbost, Marte
90
Nienhaus, Luisa
27
Nijboer, Albert
68, 73
283
Moll, Rosa
193
Niklasson, Elisabeth
Møller, Niels
125
Nilsson, Pia
Molloy, Barry
125
Nilsson Stutz, Liv
210, 255
Monetti, Lisa
282
Nimura, Courtney
Noble, Gordon
73, 171
121
Palonka, Radoslaw
Paludan-Muller, Carsten
162
248, 368
171
Panagiota Kopulu, Eva
172
Panchenko, Konstantin
375
Pancorbo, Ainhoa
55
Pancorbo Picó, Ainhoa
202
175
Panero, Elisa
291
288
Papac, Luka
Montagnari Kokelj, Manuela
157, 307
Montesanto, Mariacarmela
198
Noergaard, Heide
Morda, Barbara
156
Nordin, Jonas
121
Parker Pearson, M.
Mordovin, Maxim
241
Nordqvist, Kerkko
239
Parkinson, Eóin
281
Moreau, Anne
144
Nowak, Kamil
Parodo, Ciro
162
Morel, Hana
174
Nowak, Marek
157
Partiot, Caroline
76
68, 177
Nyland, Astrid
157, 252
Pascal, Tramoni
46
Moshenska, Gabriel
Motta, Silvia
248
Moudopoulos Athanasiou, Faidon
121
Moutafi, Ioanna
210
Mödlinger, Marianne
Mueller, Johannes
74, 114, 191
251, 295
191, 237
125, 274
Papadimitriou, Nikolas
Pásztókai-Szeoke, Judit
O
Ó Ríagáin, Russell
Pasztor, Emilia
288, 355
90
337
90
164
233, 247
Pateraki, Kleanthi
369
Patrick, Laura
202
Oberhänsli, Monika
367
Paulos Bravo, Rodrigo
Mullan, Paul
351
Ødegaard, Marie
245
Pearce, Mark
Muller, Axel
279
Odriozola, Carlos
237
Pearl, Frederic
168
Muñoz Sogas, Judith
140, 181
O'Driscoll, James
288
Peatfield, Alan
164, 367
Muñoz-Encinar, Laura
169
O'Gorman, Laura
208
Pedergnana, Antonella
247
Okonska, Magdalena
225
Pedersen, Jesper
213
Oksanen, Eljas
266
Pei, Shuwen
292
Oldham, Mark
68
Pellegrini, Maura
270
Olsen, Karyn
268
Pena Pérez, Ana
218
Olujic, Boris
173
Pendic, Jugoslav
201
Munro, Andrew
Murentseva, Tatiana
94, 217
Murer, Cristina
212
Murphy, Céline
109, 337
Murphy, Eileen
76
150
281, 283
238
Musteata, Sergiu
301, 315
Olukoya, Obafemi
325
Penezic, Kristina
Mytum, Harold
121, 339
Opris, Vasile
307
Pereira, Carlos
Orecchioni, Paola
347
Pérez, Elena
Orendi, Andrea
133
Perez-Arzak, Uxue
280
Orlando, Andrea
248
Pernigotti, Antonio Paolo
248
N
97
162
174, 301
Nakoinz, Oliver
203
Oross, Krisztián
239
Perrin, Marie
152
Nappo, Dario
198
Orschiedt, Jörg
284
Perry, Sara
342
Orsini, Celia
288
Persson, Per
284
Ortman, Scott
296
Petaros, Anja
280
Petersson, Bodil
342
Naumov, Goce
Navitainuck, Denise
Nayak, Ayushi
142, 157
353
91, 172
Osipowicz, Grzegorz
238, 310
Nebelsick, Louis D.
283
Osorio, Daniela
319
Petersson, Håkan
Negru, Cristina
233
Otto, Larissa
282
Petraru, Ozana-Maria
Neiß, Michael
191
Ozturk, Huseyin
374
Peyronel, Luca
69
280
109, 179
SESSION
SESSION
Peyroteo Stjerna, Rita
210, 279
Pfenninger, Franziska
304
Rapuano, Silvana
Phialon, Laetitia
109
Rasmussen, Josephine
Piazzini, Carlo
330
Raynaud, Karine
Picas, Mathieu
184
Rebay-Salisbury, Katharina
Piccardi, Eliana
162
Reber, Karl
Pichler, Sandra L.
353
Recchia, Giulia
Piezonka, Henny
Rappenglück, Michael
233, 247
315
SESSION
Ros-Sabé, Eva
178
Rottier, Stéphane
125
73
Roussel, Audrey
46
321
Roux, Valentine
337
Rowan, Erica
272
Roxburgh, Marcus Adrian
191
Roxby-Mackey, Melanie
179
97
181
46, 173
225, 302
Regner, Elisabet
94
Röder, Brigitte
239
Pil, Nathalie
172
Reich, Johannes
201
Röpke, Astrid
199
Pilekic, Marjanko
156
Reichert, Anne
225
Ruhl, Erika
339
Reindel, Markus
367
Rukavishnikova, Irina
185
Reinhard, Jochen
201
Rummel, Christoph
201
Reinhard, Johan
367
Runge, Mads
55
69
Russow, Erki
241
Pilloud, Marin
88
Pinto, Helena
287
Piqué i Huerta, Raquel
290, 346
Pisanu, Laura
Pluskowski, Aleks
142
Reiter, Samantha
55
Reitmaier, Thomas
367
Rutherford, Ian
Reitmaier-Naef, Leandra
274
Rutyna, Magdalena
339
Relaki, Maria
337
Ruzanova, Svetlana
237
Renn, Lisa
200
Ryan, Chelsea
95
81
Ryan, Jessica
239
Ryder, Joseph
27
Poirier, Sandy
302, 309
Pokutta, Dalia
260
Polo-Diaz, Ana
81
Popa, Alexandru
Popovic, Sara
Porqueddu, Marie-Elise
315
Rentzel, Philippe
128
Reppo, Monika
156
Reschreiter, Hans
274
237
46, 271
Porr, Martin
193
Rey, Mar
Posch, Caroline
319
Reynaud Savioz, Nicole
Potrebica, Hrvoje
209, 283
Reynolds, Natasha
199
238, 318, 344
S
Saage, Ragnar
43
191
Poveda Navarro, Antonio Manuel
162
Richards, Julian
Pradelli, Jennifer
317
Riede, Felix
Prats, Georgina
225
Riel-Salvatore, Julien
317
Šabatová, Klára
125
Pravidur, Andrijana
283
Rimkiene, Egle
191
Saito, Yukiko
140
Prendergast, Frank
233
Rimkus, Tomas
284
Salas Rossenbach, Kai
349
Price, Henry
203
Rimstad, Charlotte
155
Sala-Sellés, Feliciana
Prichystalová, Renáta
315
Rindi, Carlo
114
Salazar, Diego
68, 317
Probst-Böhm, Anja
225
Rindlisbacher, Laura
353
Salesse, Kevin
282
Pronk, Tijmen
374
Ripanti, Francesco
Saliari, Konstantina
172
Prusaczyk, Daniel
201, 271
Przybyl, Agnieszka
217
Pümpin, Christine
81
Pyzel, Joanna
239
175
284, 318
73, 177
Rademaker, Kurt
335
356, 359
162
310
Samuels, Jeffrey
356
Rivers, Ray
203
Samuelsen, Geir
369
Rizzetto, Mauro
172
Sánchez Moral, Carmen María
162
Robb, John
229, 259
Robson, Elizabeth
Rocha da Costa, Maria Clara
213, 252
Sabatini, Serena
Ritchie, Kenneth
Robin, Guillaume
R
Saari, Nelli-Johanna
Sánchez Ramos, Isabel
315
46
Sanchez Romero, Margarita
180
73
Sannito, Matilde
68, 360
Rockman, Marcy
318
Santana, Jonathan
201
88, 281
Santoro, Elena
162
Radinovic, Mihailo
281
Rodríguez del Cueto, Fernando
217
Sarauw, Torben
155
Radohs, Luisa
335
Roffet-Salque, Melanie
178
Sarcinelli, Irene
94
Radu, Petcu
315
Rogers, Bryony
270
Sasaki, Kenichi
336
Raffield, Ben
168
Rogóz, Joanna
282
Saura-Ziegelmeyer, Arnaud
184
Rainio, Riitta
184
Roijmans, Nico
209
Save, Sabrina
237, 317
Rama, Zana
321
Roio, Maili
330
Sawicki, Jakub
266, 335
Ramstein, Marianne
289
Romagnoli, Francesca
46
Sayej, Ghattas
367
Rannamäe, Eve
Rapi, Marta
Rappenglück, Barbara
172, 280
290
233, 247
Romain, William
Rosenstock, Eva
Rosetti, Ilaria
233, 367
178, 322, 382
107
Sayer, Faye
351
Sazonov, Vladimir
260
Scavone, Rossana
347
SESSION
SESSION
SESSION
Scerri, Eleanor
292
Sims, Lionel
233
Ströbl, Regina
375
Schaer, Andrea
257, 295
Singh, Pushp Lata
245
Studer, Jacqueline
347
Schaeren, Gishan
290
Sinibaldi, Micaela
Scharl, Silviane
228
Skeates, Robin
Schats, Rachel
280
Skogsaas, Bente
Schaub, Andreas
257
Skuse, Matthew
Schauer, Michaela
234
Slusarska, Katarzyna
Scherzler, Diane
95
Sne, Andris
Schlanger, Nathan
234
Schlumbaum, Angela
172
Schmaus, Tekla
208
Schmid, Viola
286
Sobkowiak-Tabaka, Iwona
Schmidt, Isabell
Schmidt Sabo, Katalin
317
39, 245
Snoeck, Christophe
39
Sukhino-Khomenko, Denis
168
46, 342
Sullivan, Eoin
234
155
Surmely, Fred
201, 303
109
Svirkina, Natalya
272, 282
125, 366
39, 302
168
Synnestvedt, Anita
57, 342
Soares, Joaquina
196
Szczepanek, Anita
94, 243
Sobczyk, Maciej
201
Szilagyi, Kata
239
178, 279
Szilágyi, Márton
239
Soderland, Hilary
307
Szubski, Michał
217, 274
Soininen, Tuija-Liisa
304
191
Søndergaard, Louise
245
Schreiber, Finn
193
Søndergaard, Mathias
245
Schreurs, José
55
Sørensen, Lasse
216
Schultze, Erdmute
315
Sørensen, Mikkel
284, 289
Schulz, Ariadne
359
Sosic Klindzic, Rajna
171
Schumacher, Mara
81
Sousa, Ana Catarina
196, 251
Schumann, Robert
76, 283
172, 291
Swenson, Dain
361
282
Schorsch, Deborah
Scott Cummings, Linda
Swallow, Rachel
Søvsø, Morten
94
T
Tafuri, Mary Anne
Takakura, Jun
Taloni, Maria
Tamminen, Heather
Taskin, Sefa
46, 268
238
95
280
43
Söderlind, Sandra
213
Teixeira, André
240
Sebald, Sidney
280
Spanjer, Mark
234
Theune, Claudia
185
Sebire, Heather
307
Speciale, Claudia
46
Thiermann, Ellen
95
Seetah, Krish
Seidl da Fonseca, Helena
317, 336
66
Speck, Sonja
109
Thoeming, Alix
Speleers, Barbara
330
Thomas, Ben
57, 168
304
Senatore, Maria
342
Spinazzè, Eva
248
Thomas, Christian
Sengeløv, Amanda
282
Spirova, Marina
251
Thomas, Julian
360
Serangeli, Matilde
374
Šprajc, Ivan
248
Thomas, Peter
274
213, 238
Serra, Anna
76
Srivastav, Om
260
Tibbetts, Belinda
Shapiro, Anastasia
81
Stadhouders, Karin
107
Tiede, Vance
382
Tilley, Lorna
268
Timberlake, Simon
274
Sharapov, Denis
Sharapova, Svetlana
Sharpe, Kate
Sheridan, Alison
Shillito, Lisa-Marie
245
76, 280
57
259, 295
81
Staeuble, Harald
Stagno, Anna Maria
225, 228
91, 150
88
Stäheli, Corinne
201
Tint, Küllike
342
Stamataki, Elisavet
125
Tiplic, Ioan Marian
315
Stamatopoulou, Vasiliki
140
Tiplic, Maria Emilia
315
Shindo, Lisa
303
Stanc, Simina Margareta
Shingiray, Irina
376
Stapfer, Regine
237, 251
Shirai, Noriyuki
85
Staurset, Sigrid
292
Toftgaard, Casper
216
Shiroukhov, Roman
27
Stavridopoulos, Ioannis
376
Tomanova, Pavla
202
Shishlina, Natalia Ivanova
Shvedchikova, Tatiana
374
169, 268
Stefanović, Sofija
39, 200
97
Tkachova, Maryia
Todoroska, Valentina
Tomas, Helena
173
Steigberger, Eva
144
Tomegea, George
315
168
Tomková, Katerina
Shydlovskyi, Pavlo
279
Steinforth, Dirk
Sieber, Dominik
375
Sterken, Christiaan
248
Tonnetti, Alex
Siebke, Inga
243
Steuri, Noah
243
Topal, Denis
Siegmund, Frank
94
142
95
Stevens, Fay
142, 304
Siklósi, Zsuzsanna
191
Stevens, Luc
271
Silva, Filipa
282
Stobiecka, Monika
174, 193
Simeoni, Giulio
173
Stoellner, Thomas
274
Tranberg, Annemari
Simões, Sara
360
Stoyanova, Daniela
140
Trant, Pernille
Simoni, Eleni
185
Straumann, Sven
200
Treadway, Tiffany
27
107
217, 259
Torras Freixa, Maria
185
Torrisi, Valentina
321
Tóth, Peter
260
339, 375
237
228, 382
SESSION
SESSION
SESSION
Tretola Martinez, Debora
245
Vávra, Roman
225
Whitehouse, Ruth
281
Triantaphyllou, Sevasti
282
Vedeler, Marianne
155
Whitford, Brent
173
Trivelloni, Ilaria
321
Veling, Alexander
239
Whittaker, Helene
140
Tsamis, Vasileios
144
Velius, Gintautas
302
Wicker, Nancy
168
Tsoraki, Christina
88
Widmer, Paul
374
Vella Gregory, Isabelle
46, 85
Tuccia, Fabiola
197
Veranic, Dejan
66
Tung, Yu-tz
174
Vercik, Marek
173
Turck, Rouven
228
Verspay, Johan
39
Wilk, Stanislaw
Turner, Daniel
271
Vervust, Soetkin
39
Wilkinson, Troy
198
43
Veselka, Barbara
76
Willems, Annemarie
111
248
Vianello, Andrea
280, 366
Türkteki, Murat
Türler, Marc
Tykot, Robert
Tys, Dries
U
46, 237
16, 17
Vieugué, Julien
85
Wigg-Wolf, David
Wild, Markus
Willemsen, Annemarieke
Windler, Arne
175
213, 279
76, 239
241
203, 239
Villa, Igor
382
Winkelbauer, Iris
185
Villa, Luca
303
Winkler, Alexandra
382
Villeneuve, Quentin
238
Winther, Torgeir
Villumsen, Sune
245
Wirth, Christa
Wiśniewski, Andrzej
245
150, 343
279
Ulanowska, Agata
133
Vining, Benjamin
178
Uldum, Otto
330
Visentin, Davide
199, 213
Uleberg, Espen
144
Visnjic, Josip
Ullrich, Burkart
367
von Nicolai, Caroline
319
Wittenberger, Mihai
260
von Rüden, Constance
337
Wojtczak, Dorota
286
Urrea-Navarrete, Josefina
57
Urrutia-Aparicio, Maitane
248
V
Vale, Ana
Valenzuela, Alejandro
Valenzuela Lamas, Silvia
360
347
270, 272
Vybornov, Alexander
157, 172
Vynogrodska, Larysa
376
W
43
Wager, Emma
274
337
376
Wagner-Durand, Elisabeth
Valk, Heiki
302
Wait, Gerald
Van Cant, Marit
van den Dries, Monique
Witte, Frauke
Wouduizen, Fred
95
255, 355
94
43
Wright, Holly
322
Wright, Lizzie
172
239, 279
Wygal, Brian
213
Wyss Schildknecht, Annina
185
Y
Yamaç, Ali
271
60
Waldhart, Elisabeth
303, 367
268
Walkowski, Szymon
335
Yang, Liang
317
91
Yann, Lorin
133, 208
68, 174
Walsh, Kevin
van der Burgt, Patricia
169
Walsh, Matthew
259, 307
van der Stok, Janneke
191
Wang, Bo-Chiao
304
322
Wärmländer, Sebastian
van Helden, Daniël
Witcher, Robert
Wunderlich, Maria
Waal, Willemijn
Valiulina, Svetlana
van Amerongen, Yvonne
27
191, 280
Yatsenko, Sergey
353
Ylimaunu, Timo
121
Yoshida, Yasuyuki
177
Watkins, Joe
368
Ystgaard, Ingrid
245
van Riel, Sjoerd
335
Waudby, Denis
133
Yvanez, Elsa
133
van Spelde, Anne-Marijn
359
Waugh, Karen
van Willigen, Samuel
251
Weaverdyck, Eli
203
Vanden Berghe, Ina
133
Webley, Robert
27, 266
Vandendriessche, Hans
284
Wegmüller, Fabio
228
237
Zander, Annabell
Van Londen, Heleen
39, 383
330, 370
Z
Zaidner, Yossi
292
Vanderhoeven, Timo
309
Wehren, Helena
Vandevelde, Jessica
330
Weig, Doerte
184
Zangger, Eberhard
Vandorpe, Patricia
272
Weinstein, Laura
198
Zastawny, Albert
251
Vannini, Guido
179
Weiss-Krejci, Estella
375
Zavyalov, Vladimir
191
Varadzin, Ladislav
271
Wenn, Camilla Cecilie
200
Zawadzki, Pawel
169
Varadzinová, Lenka
Väre, Tiina
85
Wennberg, Tom
94
375
Wessman, Anna
349
Zech-Matterne, Veronique
Zaytseva, Irina
Vareka, Pavel
39
Westmont, Camille
351
Zelenkov, Alexander
Vassileva, Maya
43
Whatley, Stuart
266
Zelentsova, Olga
284
43, 248
27
272
382
107, 168
SESSION
Zervoudakis, Panagiotis
Zhao, Jianing
128, 142
196
Zhilina, Natalia
369
Zickel, Mirijam
199
Zidarov, Petar
371
Zisis, Anastasios
97
Zorzin, Nicolas
74
Zotti, Georg
247
Zubieta Calvert, Leslie
109
Zubrow, Ezra
Zupancich, Andrea
279, 366
238
EAA 2019
25 years
B e y o n d p a ra d i g m s
BERN
4 - 7 September
Organisers
Funding
Partners
Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft
Confédération suisse
Confederatione Svizzera
Confederaziun svizra
Swiss Confederation
Federal Department of Home Affairs FDHA
Federal Office of Cultere FOC
SAGW
ASSH
Schweizerische Akademie der Geistes- und Sozialwissenschaften
Académie suisse des sciences humaines et sociales
Accademia svizzera di scienze umane e sociali
Academia svizra da scienzas umanas e socialas
Swiss Academy of Humanities and Social Sciences
KONFERENZ SCHWEIZERISCHER KANTONSARCHÄOLOGINNEN
UND KANTONSARCHÄOLOGEN ǀ KSKA
CONFERENCE SUISSE DES ARCHEOLOGUES CANTONALES
ET DES ARCHEOLOGUES CANTONAUX ǀ CSAC
CONFERENZA SVIZZERA DELLE ARCHEOLOGE CANTONALI
E DEGLI ARCHEOLOGI CANTONALI ǀ CSAC
________________________________________________________
Lotteriefonds
Kanton Bern
#EAA2019
#EAA2019
www.e-a-a.org/eaa2019