Schats, Rachel (Dr.)
Rachel Schats is gepromoveerd op het onderzoek naar de fysieke consequenties van de middeleeuwse ontwikkelingen aan de hand van verschillende rurale en urbane skeletcollecties. Op het moment is zij werkzaam aan Universiteit Leiden als docent waar ze verantwoordelijk is voor het osteoarcheologische onderwijs in de bachelor en master.
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Rachel Schats studied archaeology with a specialisation in osteoarchaeology at Leiden University and University College London after which she was appointed as a research and teaching assistant for the Laboratory of Human Osteoarchaeology in Leiden. Her PhD (defended November 2016) aimed at gaining a better understanding of the physical consequences of medieval developments, such as urbanisation and commercialisation, by comparing rural and urban skeletal populations.
Schlanger, Nathan (Prof. Dr.)
Nathan Schlanger is professor of archaeology at the Ecole nationale des chartes, Paris. His research interests include prehistoric archaeology, material culture studies, archaeological heritage management, and the history and politics of archaeology.
Schmidt, Laura C. (Dr.)
Laura Schmidt has studied Classics at the Christian-Albrechts University of Kiel and the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. She defended her PhD thesis under the title “From Lesbos to Athens: Sappho’s Place in the Symposium and Greek Learning” in 2020. She has been member of the Graduate School ‘Human Development in Landscapes’ (2016-2020). She worked on Plato’s concept of optics at the CRC 1266 “Scales of Transformation” at Kiel (2020) and participated in the interdisciplinary project “Gardens, Human Senses and Eudaimonia” of the Cluster of Excellence ROOTS at Kiel (2021). She is currently researching the “thin Anthropocene” in classical antiquity as a member of the ROOTS Cluster of Excellence.
Schneeweiß, Jens (Dr.)
Jens Schneeweiß (Dr. phil., Humboldt University Berlin, 2004) is a scientist at the Institute of Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology at Kiel University and the LEIZA (Leibniz Centre for Archaeology), Department of Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology in Schleswig, Germany. He is deputy speaker of the sub-cluster ROOTS of Conflict of the Cluster of Excellence “ROOTS – Social, Environmental, and Cultural Connectivity in Past Societies” in Kiel. As an associate professor of prehistory and early history, he teaches at the Georg August University in Göttingen, Germany.
Schülke, Almut (Prof. Dr.)
Almut Schülke is professor of Nordic Archaeology at the Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo. Her research comprises studies on landscape archaeology, human-environment interaction and social space, mobility, ritual and mortuary practices. Her works on the social dimension of mortuary practices include studies on christianization and grave finds (Southwest Germany) and on megalithic tombs in Neolithic Zealand (Denmark), the latter with focus on different modes of burying the dead as well as the social relations between humans and their surroundings as embedded in megalithic tombs, and on Mesolithic burial and mortuary practices in Norway in a Northern European perspective.
Schultrich, Sebastian MA (MA)
Sebastian Schultrich obtained the master degree in 2017. For his master thesis ‘Das Jungneolithikum in Schlewsig-Holstein’ he received the archaeology award of the Archaeological Society Schleswig-Holstein (AGSH) in 2018. In 2018 he started as a PhD student at the Graduate School ‘Human Development in Landscapes’ at Kiel University with a project entitled ‘Maritime networks: Formation, development and significance of Neolithic networks in areas adjacent to the North Sea’.
Schumann, Robert (Dr.)
Robert Schumann is currently substitute professor at Heidelberg University. Prior to that, the worked and researched in Hamburg, Berlin and Munich after receiving his PhD from Munich in 2014. His research interests include Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age, social archaeology and social organisation, contemporary archaeology and the history of archaeology.
Schats, Rachel (Dr.)
Rachel Schats is gepromoveerd op het onderzoek naar de fysieke consequenties van de middeleeuwse ontwikkelingen aan de hand van verschillende rurale en urbane skeletcollecties. Op het moment is zij werkzaam aan Universiteit Leiden als docent waar ze verantwoordelijk is voor het osteoarcheologische onderwijs in de bachelor en master.
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Rachel Schats studied archaeology with a specialisation in osteoarchaeology at Leiden University and University College London after which she was appointed as a research and teaching assistant for the Laboratory of Human Osteoarchaeology in Leiden. Her PhD (defended November 2016) aimed at gaining a better understanding of the physical consequences of medieval developments, such as urbanisation and commercialisation, by comparing rural and urban skeletal populations.
Schlanger, Nathan (Prof. Dr.)
Nathan Schlanger is professor of archaeology at the Ecole nationale des chartes, Paris. His research interests include prehistoric archaeology, material culture studies, archaeological heritage management, and the history and politics of archaeology.
Schmidt, Laura C. (Dr.)
Laura Schmidt has studied Classics at the Christian-Albrechts University of Kiel and the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. She defended her PhD thesis under the title “From Lesbos to Athens: Sappho’s Place in the Symposium and Greek Learning” in 2020. She has been member of the Graduate School ‘Human Development in Landscapes’ (2016-2020). She worked on Plato’s concept of optics at the CRC 1266 “Scales of Transformation” at Kiel (2020) and participated in the interdisciplinary project “Gardens, Human Senses and Eudaimonia” of the Cluster of Excellence ROOTS at Kiel (2021). She is currently researching the “thin Anthropocene” in classical antiquity as a member of the ROOTS Cluster of Excellence.
Schneeweiß, Jens (Dr.)
Jens Schneeweiß (Dr. phil., Humboldt University Berlin, 2004) is a scientist at the Institute of Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology at Kiel University and the LEIZA (Leibniz Centre for Archaeology), Department of Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology in Schleswig, Germany. He is deputy speaker of the sub-cluster ROOTS of Conflict of the Cluster of Excellence “ROOTS – Social, Environmental, and Cultural Connectivity in Past Societies” in Kiel. As an associate professor of prehistory and early history, he teaches at the Georg August University in Göttingen, Germany.
Schülke, Almut (Prof. Dr.)
Almut Schülke is professor of Nordic Archaeology at the Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo. Her research comprises studies on landscape archaeology, human-environment interaction and social space, mobility, ritual and mortuary practices. Her works on the social dimension of mortuary practices include studies on christianization and grave finds (Southwest Germany) and on megalithic tombs in Neolithic Zealand (Denmark), the latter with focus on different modes of burying the dead as well as the social relations between humans and their surroundings as embedded in megalithic tombs, and on Mesolithic burial and mortuary practices in Norway in a Northern European perspective.
Schultrich, Sebastian MA (MA)
Sebastian Schultrich obtained the master degree in 2017. For his master thesis ‘Das Jungneolithikum in Schlewsig-Holstein’ he received the archaeology award of the Archaeological Society Schleswig-Holstein (AGSH) in 2018. In 2018 he started as a PhD student at the Graduate School ‘Human Development in Landscapes’ at Kiel University with a project entitled ‘Maritime networks: Formation, development and significance of Neolithic networks in areas adjacent to the North Sea’.
Schumann, Robert (Dr.)
Robert Schumann is currently substitute professor at Heidelberg University. Prior to that, the worked and researched in Hamburg, Berlin and Munich after receiving his PhD from Munich in 2014. His research interests include Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age, social archaeology and social organisation, contemporary archaeology and the history of archaeology.