Archaeology News and Announcements

from Brown University's Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World

Tag: Heritage Conservation

NINO Annual Meeting | Call for Papers

 

The NINO Annual Meeting offers an opportunity for advanced students and researchers of the Near East (ancient to the early modern) in the Netherlands to meet and exchange ideas about ongoing and envisioned research projects. The event is co-organized by the Netherlands Institute of the Near East (NINO) and an alternating host institution. This year the meeting is hosted by the University of Groningen, on the topic: “Heritage and politics in the Middle East: Historical Perspectives.”

The study of the Near East has historically been entangled with politics, from those of early modern states and empires, to those of foreign institutes, universities, and museums. This annual meeting focuses on heritage politics of the Middle East from a historical perspective. How have the studies of historical sources, archaeological remains, and texts from the past, been involved with early modern state formation, (de)colonization, cultural diplomacy, economic policies, memory practices? How was this involvement received by people living in the Middle East, and heritage institutions abroad? And today, how is it represented in the curricula of degrees focusing on the Middle Eastern past? How does it influence fieldwork and archive practices?

The committee is currently accepting 20 min. papers on studies pertaining to this topic. In addition, they invite 5 min. research introductions on any ongoing and envisioned research on the Near East. Junior scholars (MA, PhD) are particularly welcome to apply.

Please register via email if you wish to attend, present during the lightning session, or present a longer paper on the topic of Heritage and Politics.

Please include the following information:

  • Surname
  • Name
  • Title
  • Affiliation
  • E-mail address
  • I would like to attend and give a 20’ paper
    • Title of paper
  • I would like to attend and present a 5’ presentation in the lightning session
    • Title of lightning session
  • Abstract (250 words)

Please register by email to ninoconf25@gmail.com by November 1, 2024.

Call for Papers | 14th Cambridge Heritage Symposium

The Cambridge Heritage Research Centre is due to host the 24th Annual Cambridge Heritage Symposium between the 19th and 20th of June 2024 in the McDonald Building, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge. Entitled Heritage Expertise: Paradigm or Platitude? this year’s symposium provides the first constructive attempt to critically interrogate the skills and roles of those working and researching within heritage spheres. More importantly, the symposium makes an innovative and significant contribution to heritage theory, practice, and methodologies by focusing on skills and roles, some of which have been overlooked by the participative turn in heritage theory and practice.

For more information on the upcoming symposium, as well as how to submit your paper, please click this link.

ARIT Online Lecture | Alevi-Bektashi Digital Archive: A Project of Cultural Preservation

The American Research Institute in Turkey (ARIT) is hosting an online lecture with Professor Ayfer Karakaya-Stump (History, The College of William and Mary) entitled “Alevi-Bektashi Digital Archive: A Project of Cultural Preservation.”

Professor Karakaya-Stump will discus the Alevi-Bektashi Digital Archive project undertaken in collaboration with Professor Cemal Kafadar, Harvard University. The project aims to document and safeguard the historical and cultural heritage of Alevi-Bektashi communities in Anatolia and the Balkans, making it accessible to a broad audience through a user-friendly digital platform.

March 11, 2024 at 6 pm Istanbul, 10 am EST

For more information on the lecture, as well as ARIT, please follow this link. To register for the online lecture, please click this link here.

Summer Gastronomic Heritage Workshop in Puglia, Italy

Messors Art Restoration & Cultural Preservation is hosting a Summer workshop on Gastronomic Heritage in Puglia, Italy. The workshop is led by Puglian native Tonio Creanza, the Founder and Director of Messors and 6th generation olive oil and durum wheat producer, along with his colleagues of local farmers, cheese makers, shepherds, historians, restauranteurs, etc.

Tonio grew up on his family farm tending to durum wheat, vineyards and olive tree cultivation in the historical and archeological rich setting of Puglia. As a cultural heritage conservator and 6th generation olive oil producer, his knowledge and passion for food and history is echoed in the workshops he has been running for the past 25 years. The hands-on and in-situ approach of the workshops creates an enriching living school model and culturally connecting experiences for travelers and locals.

The workshop lasts over 8 days and includes:

  • The fundamentals of southern Italian cuisine: olive oil, wine, durum wheat flour, cheese, and seasonal produce. How it is grown, harvested, produced, and cooked. Cook, eat and enjoy it with the community who makes sitting down for meals an important part of their everyday.
  • Olive oil tasting and talk on “The origin and evolution of olive oil extraction; distinguishing a true extra-virgin olive oil and demystifying supermarket labelling definitions.  In the olive orchards – talk on cultivars, pruning, tending, harvesting.
  • Drink the unique regional wines made from autochthonous grapes preexisting the ancient Greek colonization.
  • From Gravina, walk to the summit of the hill rising above town. Hike through the archaeological site of Botomagno (6th- 2nd century B.C.E.) and discuss how ravine caves and trade routes have shaped food culture.
  • Cheesemaking at 3rd century B.C. Fornello Cave site, meet with the shepherd and his family to bring in the flock from pasture and be part of his daily life.  Learn about the cheeses of Puglia, traditional rennet, and aging. Participants will make pecorino, mozzarella, bocconcini, treccia, burrata, scamorza.
  • Visit and talk about the evolution of Matera and its Sassi, the unique cave-dwelling settlement inhabited for millennia and a UNESCO heritage site.
  • Get up at dawn to be on time with fornaio Giuseppe at Antico Forno Santa Caterina (15th-century) and learn about the mother dough of Altamura DOP bread.
  • Lecture and walk through the historical town of Altamura: “The urban evolution and rural settlement of Altamura – centro storico from Neolithic to Medieval era: the historical connection of food, social structures, and celebratory customs”.
  • White & sparkling wines and swim in the Mediterranean Sea, on the Ionian beach where Pythagoras used to teach ancient Greeks.
  • Local farm- talk on Durum wheat crops, seeding, and harvesting. Learn to make durum wheat flour pasta with different shapes specific to the region.
  • Take to the streets of the old town and put your acquired knowledge and skills into practice- prepare and cook dinner with and for locals.
  • Excursions to: Matera, Altamura, Ionian Sea, Calanchi region, historical sites of Botromagno, Jesce, Fornello.

*Field trips and projected itinerary are subject to changes depending on weather conditions, museum and third parties operating hours, and unforeseen circumstances.

To find out how to register and the available dates, click this link here.

 

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