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Ontological Considerations on Illyrian Cities [ABSTRACT]

2019, European Association of Archaeologists: Beyond Paradigms

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 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).

EAA 2019 25 years B e y o n d p a ra d i g m s BERN Associa t 25 years Ar c ha AA ) of Europ an ion e 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