Wild, Markus (Dr.)
Markus Wild studied in France and Germany and works as postdoctoral research fellow at the Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology, Germany. His research projects try to elucidate human behavioural evolution and particularly focus on the material culture and chronology of the Upper Palaeolithic to Mesolithic in northwestern Europe. He has developed expertise in technological analysis and radiocarbon dating of worked bone. His research interests also include risk management in hunter-gatherer societies, children’s learning, and interdisciplinary approaches to archaeology.
Wilkinson, Toby C. (Dr.)
Toby C. Wilkinson is currently a TÜBITAK postdoctoral research fellow at the Department of Archaeology, Istanbul University, Turkey (2013-2014). He studied anthropology and archaeology at the University of Oxford, University College London and the Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield. He has also worked for the Pitt Rivers Museum and Dept. of Continuing Education in Oxford and has held research scholarships from the British Institute at Ankara (BIAA) and Koç University’s Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations (RCAC).
Willems, Willem J.H. (Prof. Dr.)
Willem J.H. Willems (1950-2014) was professor of archaeological heritage at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands. Previously he was Dean of the Faculty, after a career at the State Antiquities Service where he became director and Chief Archaeologist of the Netherlands.
Willemsen, Annemarieke (Dr.)
Annemarieke Willemsen is curator of the Medieval collections at the National Museum of Antiquities (Leiden) and director of the Dorestad Congress. In Leiden, she organized the 2009 exhibition & congress on Carolingian Dorestad and the 2014 exhibition & congress on the early-medieval Netherlands. Next to books about Dorestad and the Vikings in the Netherlands, she published extensively on Roman and medieval children, toys, education, fashion & accessories.
Williams, Howard (Prof. Dr.)
Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester. Famous for his work on the study of death, burial and commemoration in Early Medieval Britain and Scandinavia, Howard also actively engages his audience through his well-loved blog and other social media channels.
Wingfield, Chris
Chris Wingfield is Senior Curator (Archaeology) at the Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, University of Cambridge. He has a particular interest in the museum and collections of the London Missionary Society. He has previously worked on a number of research projects at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford and as a curator at Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.
Wolf, Ulrike M. (Dr.)
Ulrike Wolf completed a Magister degree at Goethe University in Frankfurt, based on studies in Classical Archaeology and the History and Culture of the Roman Provinces. The Lichtenberg-project “Münzen und die Dynamik der Macht: Der westliche Mittelmeerraum, 500 – 100 v. Chr”, directed by Prof. Fleur Kemmers, offered her the perfect environment for the PhD thesis submitted in 2017.
She is interested in interface phenomena such as the analysis of archaeological, historical and social developments in periods and spaces of transition. In her teaching assignments she focuses on comparative analysis and interdisciplinary approaches to archaeological topics, as well as reception studies and the history of science. Recently she has been strongly involved in the implementation of e-learning methods and digital media in university teaching.
Wild, Markus (Dr.)
Markus Wild studied in France and Germany and works as postdoctoral research fellow at the Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology, Germany. His research projects try to elucidate human behavioural evolution and particularly focus on the material culture and chronology of the Upper Palaeolithic to Mesolithic in northwestern Europe. He has developed expertise in technological analysis and radiocarbon dating of worked bone. His research interests also include risk management in hunter-gatherer societies, children’s learning, and interdisciplinary approaches to archaeology.
Wilkinson, Toby C. (Dr.)
Toby C. Wilkinson is currently a TÜBITAK postdoctoral research fellow at the Department of Archaeology, Istanbul University, Turkey (2013-2014). He studied anthropology and archaeology at the University of Oxford, University College London and the Department of Archaeology, University of Sheffield. He has also worked for the Pitt Rivers Museum and Dept. of Continuing Education in Oxford and has held research scholarships from the British Institute at Ankara (BIAA) and Koç University’s Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations (RCAC).
Willems, Willem J.H. (Prof. Dr.)
Willem J.H. Willems (1950-2014) was professor of archaeological heritage at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands. Previously he was Dean of the Faculty, after a career at the State Antiquities Service where he became director and Chief Archaeologist of the Netherlands.
Willemsen, Annemarieke (Dr.)
Annemarieke Willemsen is curator of the Medieval collections at the National Museum of Antiquities (Leiden) and director of the Dorestad Congress. In Leiden, she organized the 2009 exhibition & congress on Carolingian Dorestad and the 2014 exhibition & congress on the early-medieval Netherlands. Next to books about Dorestad and the Vikings in the Netherlands, she published extensively on Roman and medieval children, toys, education, fashion & accessories.
Williams, Howard (Prof. Dr.)
Howard Williams is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Chester. Famous for his work on the study of death, burial and commemoration in Early Medieval Britain and Scandinavia, Howard also actively engages his audience through his well-loved blog and other social media channels.
Wingfield, Chris
Chris Wingfield is Senior Curator (Archaeology) at the Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, University of Cambridge. He has a particular interest in the museum and collections of the London Missionary Society. He has previously worked on a number of research projects at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford and as a curator at Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery.
Wolf, Ulrike M. (Dr.)
Ulrike Wolf completed a Magister degree at Goethe University in Frankfurt, based on studies in Classical Archaeology and the History and Culture of the Roman Provinces. The Lichtenberg-project “Münzen und die Dynamik der Macht: Der westliche Mittelmeerraum, 500 – 100 v. Chr”, directed by Prof. Fleur Kemmers, offered her the perfect environment for the PhD thesis submitted in 2017.
She is interested in interface phenomena such as the analysis of archaeological, historical and social developments in periods and spaces of transition. In her teaching assignments she focuses on comparative analysis and interdisciplinary approaches to archaeological topics, as well as reception studies and the history of science. Recently she has been strongly involved in the implementation of e-learning methods and digital media in university teaching.