Belard, Chloé
Chloé Belard is a scientific collaborator in the UMR 8546 AOROC CNRSENS of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. She is affiliated with the Department of Archaeology of the University of Southampton (UK), where she worked in a post-doctoral position funded by the Fyssen Foundation. She has published papers related to gender archaeology and her PhD thesis, concerning the funerary representation of women in Iron Age cemeteries in Champagne.
Trémeaud, Caroline
Caroline Trémeaud currently holds an adjunct position. She is working on several publications including her dissertation, entitled: La production des ' grandes femmes ', la relation des femmes avec la richesse et le pouvoir aux âges du Bronze et du Fer dans le domaine celtique nord-alpin. For this work on the role of women in protohistoric societies, she was awarded a three year PhD scholarship by the Émilie du Châtelet Institute. Her field of expertise centers on the North-Alpine complex during the Bronze and Iron Ages, with a focus on gender and hierarchy issues. Nevertheless she is interested in gender expression and hierarchy in other societies from the Mediterranean Basin.
Fries, Jana Esther
Since 2007 Dr. Jana Esther Fries is a heritage officer at the Lower Saxony State Service for Cultural Heritage and responsible for the archaeological heritage in the West of Lower Saxony. At the University of Oldenburg she teaches introductory courses in prehistoric archaeology and cultural heritage management. From 1996 to 2006 she worked as director of rescue excavations for different federal states. Her research is focused on Iron Age, gender issues, settlement archaeology and more recently on late Paleolithic sites and Mesolithic hearth pits.
Sycamore, Rachael
Rachael Sycamore is a current PhD student at the University of Leicester with interests in Roman Archaeology alongside the way in which past societies and archaeology as a discipline is represented within current society and popular media.
Gutsmiedl-Schümann, Doris
Dr. Doris Gutsmiedl-Schümann is currently assistant professor at the Institute of Prehistoric Archaeology, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany. From 2011 to 2016 she was research associate and study program manager at the Department of Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology, University of Bonn, and contracted lecturer at Leuphana university Lüneburg and at Helmut-Schmidt-University/University of the Federal Armed Forces, Hamburg, where she teaches introductory courses in prehistoric archaeology. Her research interest are lifeworlds, gender roles and identity; the Justinian plaque; visual representations of the past; the archaeology of death and burial; chronology as well as statistical methods and databases in archaeology. She is mainly working in Iron Age Scandinavia; Roman Period; Migration Period as well as Merovingian Period and younger Early Middle Ages.
Koch, Georg
Georg Koch studied history, computer science and public history at Freie Universität Berlin. Since 2012 he has been working in the transdisciplinary project “Living History. Reenacted Prehistory between Research and Popular Performance” at the Centre for Contemporary History in Potsdam. Within the project, he prepared his doctoral thesis about prehistory in British and German TV-documentaries. Under the title “Perceived Truth” he combined the perspectives of science and media history to a history of knowledge about archaeological finds and social fictions in the course of the 20th century.
Gutsmiedl-Schümann, Doris
Dr. Doris Gutsmiedl-Schümann is currently assistant professor at the Institute of Prehistoric Archaeology, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany. From 2011 to 2016 she was research associate and study program manager at the Department of Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology, University of Bonn, and contracted lecturer at Leuphana university Lüneburg and at Helmut-Schmidt-University/University of the Federal Armed Forces, Hamburg, where she teaches introductory courses in prehistoric archaeology. Her research interest are lifeworlds, gender roles and identity; the Justinian plaque; visual representations of the past; the archaeology of death and burial; chronology as well as statistical methods and databases in archaeology. She is mainly working in Iron Age Scandinavia; Roman Period; Migration Period as well as Merovingian Period and younger Early Middle Ages.
Eppler, Kirsten
Kirsten Eppler M.A. hat Ur- und Frühgeschichte, Mittelalter- und Neuzeitarchäologie sowie Klassische Archäologie in Tübingen und Stellenbosch, Südafrika, studiert. Nach ihrem Abschluss war sie zunächst Volontärin, später Mitarbeiterin am Landesmuseum Württemberg in Stuttgart und arbeitet derzeit an der Universität Erfurt an ihrer Dissertation zur Geschichte der Archäologie im 17. und 18. Jahrhundert. Sie interessiert sich für die komplexen
Wechselwirkungen von Kolonialismus und Archäologie und deren bis heute nachwirkende ethische Dimensionen sowie die vielschichtigen Beziehungen zwischen Archäologie und Gesellschaft. Weitere Forschungsinteressen liegen im Bereich musealer Sammlungsgeschichte(n) und der Geschichte der Archäologie.
Matias, Jo Zalea
Dr. Jo Zalea Matias has recently completed her doctoral work at the University of Durham. Her work focuses on Iron Age Britain and France, and her research interests include archaeology in popular and social media, visual representations of the past, gender identity, and historiography. As a co-principal investigator on the “New light on old sites” project, she is currently reassessing the Iron Age site of Swallowcliffe Down in Wiltshire, UK.
Rambuscheck, Ulrike
Ulrike Rambuscheck M.A. studierte Ur- und Frühgeschichte, Klassische Archäologie und Völkerkunde in Köln und Göttingen. Sie ist im Vorstand von FemArc – Netzwerk archäologisch arbeitender Frauen e. V. engagiert. Seit 2005 fungiert sie als Co-Sprecherin der AG Geschlechterforschung bei den Altertumsverbänden. Daraus ergab sich die (Mit-)Herausgabe mehrerer Bände der Reihe Frauen – Forschung – Archäologie. Nach einer Tätigkeit als Grabungsleiterin arbeitet sie seit 2008 als freiberufliche Lektorin.
Fries, Jana Esther
Since 2007 Dr. Jana Esther Fries is a heritage officer at the Lower Saxony State Service for Cultural Heritage and responsible for the archaeological heritage in the West of Lower Saxony. At the University of Oldenburg she teaches introductory courses in prehistoric archaeology and cultural heritage management. From 1996 to 2006 she worked as director of rescue excavations for different federal states. Her research is focused on Iron Age, gender issues, settlement archaeology and more recently on late Paleolithic sites and Mesolithic hearth pits.
Zipf, Gabriele
Gabriele Zipf studierte in München, Paris und Berlin Ur- und Frühgeschichte, Klassische Archäologie und Ethnologie. Nach Abschluss ihrer Dissertation über figürliche Darstellungen der Bronzezeit war sie in der Denkmalpflege und für verschiedene Museen tätig. Als Projektleiterin baute sie unter anderem die Arche Nebra und das paläon auf und war stellvertretende Abteilungsleiterin der Archäologie im Niedersächsischen Landesamt für Denkmalpflege. Im Sommer 2015 übernahm sie die Leitung des Ausstellungsbereichs im Futurium, einem Ausstellungs-, Experimentier- und Veranstaltungsforum in Berlin.
Merthen, Claudia
Claudia Merthen studierte nach einer textiltechnischen Berufsausbildung Archäologie und war nach ihrer Promotion im Graduiertenkolleg „Wahrnehmung der Geschlechterdifferenz in religiösen Symbolsystemen“ in Würzburg auch in den Bereichen Kulturtourismus und Kulturmarketing tätig. Derzeit ist sie freie wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin am Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg, sowie am KPZ. Ihre Arbeitsschwerpunkte sind Ikonographie, griechische Keramik, Kulturgeschichte, archäologische Textilien, Rekonstruktionen, Archäotechnik/Experimentelle Archäologie, Archäologievermittlung und Ausstellungsgestaltung.
Prados Torreira, Lourdes
Lourdes Prados Torreira is a Professor of Archaeology in the Department of Prehistory and Archaeology at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Her research mainly focuses on the Protohistory of the Mediterranean and in particular, issues of religion and gender in Iberian Culture (sixth to first centuries BC), as well as on gender and archaeological heritage and museology.
López Ruiz, Clara
Clara López Ruiz is PhD student in the Department of Prehistory and Archaeology at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Her research focuses on archaeological museums and gender.
Fält, Katja
Dr. Katja Fält received her PhD in art history from the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. Her dissertation “Wall Paintings, Workshops, and Visual Production in the Medieval Diocese of Turku from 1430 to 1540” was published in 2012. She is currently working with a post-doctoral research project at the University of Jyväskylä that focuses on medieval bodyscapes and visual culture in late medieval Finland. Her research interests include representations of the Middle Ages and gender in non-fiction books for young readers, and gender, devotion and “otherness” in medieval visual culture.
Rambuscheck, Ulrike
Ulrike Rambuscheck M.A. studierte Ur- und Frühgeschichte, Klassische Archäologie und Völkerkunde in Köln und Göttingen. Sie ist im Vorstand von FemArc – Netzwerk archäologisch arbeitender Frauen e. V. engagiert. Seit 2005 fungiert sie als Co-Sprecherin der AG Geschlechterforschung bei den Altertumsverbänden. Daraus ergab sich die (Mit-)Herausgabe mehrerer Bände der Reihe Frauen – Forschung – Archäologie. Nach einer Tätigkeit als Grabungsleiterin arbeitet sie seit 2008 als freiberufliche Lektorin.
Matias, Jo Zalea
Dr. Jo Zalea Matias has recently completed her doctoral work at the University of Durham. Her work focuses on Iron Age Britain and France, and her research interests include archaeology in popular and social media, visual representations of the past, gender identity, and historiography. As a co-principal investigator on the “New light on old sites” project, she is currently reassessing the Iron Age site of Swallowcliffe Down in Wiltshire, UK.
Jacob, Christina
Dr. Christina Jacob, Leiterin der Archäologischen Sammlung der Städtischen Museen Heilbronn seit 1986. Gründung der bundesweiten AG Archäologie im Museum 2001 und Sprecherin bis 2011 (heute Fachgruppe des Deutschen Museumsbundes). Redaktion der museo-Reihe des Museums zu archäologischen Themen und Sonderausstellungen. Kuratorin der archäologischen Sonderausstellungen in den Städtischen Museen Heilbronn, zuletzt 2007 Tatort Talheim, 2010 Steinzeit-Großbaustellen, 2012 Heilbronn historisch, 2013 Alltagsarchäologische Analogobjekte.