Stocks, Claire (Dr.)

Claire Stocks is Lecturer for Classics at Newcastle University (UK). Her research interests include Augustan and post Augustan epic, especially Flavian epic. She is the author of The Roman Hannibal: Remembering the Enemy in Silius Italicus’ Punica, Liverpool, 2014 and co-editor of Horace’s Epodes: Context, Intertexts, and Reception, Oxford, 2016, and Fides in Flavian Poetry, Toronto, 2019. She is currently working on a monograph on the representation of Space in Domitianic Rome.

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Stolte, Carolien Mphil (Dr. Mphil)

Carolien Stolte is a University Lecturer in History at Leiden University. She studied History and South Asian Studies at Leiden, Paris (EHESS) and Geneva (IHEID), and was a postdoctoral fellow at the History Department at Harvard University in 2014-2015. Carolien is editor of the book series Dutch Sources on South Asia, as well as managing editor of the Cambridge University Press journal Itinerario.

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Sundström, Sofia (Dr.)

Sofia Sundström is fascinated by how a culture absorbs and develops an outside religious artistic influence. Her interest in the Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara started during her MA studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. She continued her studies at the University of Leiden and her PhD thesis examines images of Avalokiteśvara from the Buddhist period in Java.

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Swinkels, Louis (Drs.)

Louis Swinkels was curator of archaeology at the Valkhof Museum in Nijmegen. His research interests lie primarily in the fields of Roman iconography and epigraphy, museum studies and the history of archaeology.

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s’Jacob, Hugo (Dr.)

Hugo s’Jacob was tot zijn pensionering universitair hoofddocent aan de Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Daarna was hij als vrijwillig onderzoeker verbonden aan het Huygens Instituut voor Nederlandse Geschiedenis (KNAW). Hij is de vierde editeur van de Generale Missiven, sinds het begin van de serie in 1960.

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Tarawneh, Mohamed F.

Mohamed Fayez Tarawneh is Associate Professor at Yarmouk University, specialized in the Anthropology of development and particularly interested in rural development and social change. Furthermore, he is the general manager of the Hashemite Fund for the Development of Jordan Badia. Some of his major publications concern a historical and social geographic study of the Jordanian town and countryside of Kerak, the participatory development in Wadi Araba and Poverty in Jordan.

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Ten Hoopen, Peter (Dr.)

From 1968 to 1971 Dr. Peter ten Hoopen lived in and travelled through the Middle East and South Asia, conducting journalistic research and recording ethnic music in Afghanistan, now curated by the Smithsonian Institution (Washington, DC). During his extensive travels in 65 countries in subsequent years he witnessed the ongoing decline of numerous indigenous traditions. This experience affected him deeply and in 1976 led to his initiative to assemble a reference collection of particularly imperilled Indonesian ikat textiles – meticulously documented on a level not previously attempted.

Since his retirement in 2010 Peter ten Hoopen has been focussing on documenting of the above-mentioned, by then extensive reference collection of Indonesian ikat textiles. This has led to major exhibitions at the Museu do Oriente in Lisbon (2014-2015 and 2019-2020) and at the Museum and Art Gallery, the University of Hong Kong (2017-2018), for which he authored or edited the catalogues. His collecting and documenting since the mid-1970s culminated in the publication of his Ikat Textiles of the Indonesian Archipelago (2018) and the research reported in the present PhD thesis.

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Stocks, Claire (Dr.)

Claire Stocks is Lecturer for Classics at Newcastle University (UK). Her research interests include Augustan and post Augustan epic, especially Flavian epic. She is the author of The Roman Hannibal: Remembering the Enemy in Silius Italicus’ Punica, Liverpool, 2014 and co-editor of Horace’s Epodes: Context, Intertexts, and Reception, Oxford, 2016, and Fides in Flavian Poetry, Toronto, 2019. She is currently working on a monograph on the representation of Space in Domitianic Rome.

read more

Stolte, Carolien Mphil (Dr. Mphil)

Carolien Stolte is a University Lecturer in History at Leiden University. She studied History and South Asian Studies at Leiden, Paris (EHESS) and Geneva (IHEID), and was a postdoctoral fellow at the History Department at Harvard University in 2014-2015. Carolien is editor of the book series Dutch Sources on South Asia, as well as managing editor of the Cambridge University Press journal Itinerario.

read more

Sundström, Sofia (Dr.)

Sofia Sundström is fascinated by how a culture absorbs and develops an outside religious artistic influence. Her interest in the Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara started during her MA studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. She continued her studies at the University of Leiden and her PhD thesis examines images of Avalokiteśvara from the Buddhist period in Java.

read more

Swinkels, Louis (Drs.)

Louis Swinkels was curator of archaeology at the Valkhof Museum in Nijmegen. His research interests lie primarily in the fields of Roman iconography and epigraphy, museum studies and the history of archaeology.

read more

s’Jacob, Hugo (Dr.)

Hugo s’Jacob was tot zijn pensionering universitair hoofddocent aan de Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Daarna was hij als vrijwillig onderzoeker verbonden aan het Huygens Instituut voor Nederlandse Geschiedenis (KNAW). Hij is de vierde editeur van de Generale Missiven, sinds het begin van de serie in 1960.

read more

Tarawneh, Mohamed F.

Mohamed Fayez Tarawneh is Associate Professor at Yarmouk University, specialized in the Anthropology of development and particularly interested in rural development and social change. Furthermore, he is the general manager of the Hashemite Fund for the Development of Jordan Badia. Some of his major publications concern a historical and social geographic study of the Jordanian town and countryside of Kerak, the participatory development in Wadi Araba and Poverty in Jordan.

read more

Ten Hoopen, Peter (Dr.)

From 1968 to 1971 Dr. Peter ten Hoopen lived in and travelled through the Middle East and South Asia, conducting journalistic research and recording ethnic music in Afghanistan, now curated by the Smithsonian Institution (Washington, DC). During his extensive travels in 65 countries in subsequent years he witnessed the ongoing decline of numerous indigenous traditions. This experience affected him deeply and in 1976 led to his initiative to assemble a reference collection of particularly imperilled Indonesian ikat textiles – meticulously documented on a level not previously attempted.

Since his retirement in 2010 Peter ten Hoopen has been focussing on documenting of the above-mentioned, by then extensive reference collection of Indonesian ikat textiles. This has led to major exhibitions at the Museu do Oriente in Lisbon (2014-2015 and 2019-2020) and at the Museum and Art Gallery, the University of Hong Kong (2017-2018), for which he authored or edited the catalogues. His collecting and documenting since the mid-1970s culminated in the publication of his Ikat Textiles of the Indonesian Archipelago (2018) and the research reported in the present PhD thesis.

read more




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