Inaugural Lectures
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Wendy Bracewell (SSEES)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Peter John (Political Science)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Hans Van Wees (History)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Lisa Jardine (Renaissance Studies)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Jon French (Department of Geography)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor David Wengrow (Department of Archaeology)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Elizabeth Graham (Institute of Archaeology)
- Inaugural Lecture - Dr Peter Swaab (Department of English)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Kevin MacDonald (Department of Archaeology)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Jan Eeckhout (Department of Economics)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Ian Freestone (Department of Archaeology)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Iwan Morgan (Institute of Americas)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Neil Mitchell (International Relations)
- Inaugural Lecture - Professor Maxine Molyneux (Institute of Americas)
- CANCELLED: Inaugural Lecture - Professor Morten Ravn (Economics)
Inaugural Lecture - Professor Kevin MacDonald (Department of Archaeology)
24 October 2012
26 February 2013

UCL Gustave Tuck Lecture Theatre, Wilkins Building UCL - 6.30pm
Professor Kevin MacDonald (Department of Archaeology)
Kevin MacDonald joined the UCL Institute of Archaeology immediately after completing his PhD at Cambridge in 1994. He has undertaken regular fieldwork in Mali since 1989, working in most regions of the country including the Middle Niger, the Haute Vallée, and northern Dogon country. Professor MacDonald’s books include Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory (with Paul Lane) and African Re-Genesis: Confronting Social Issues in the Diaspora (with Jay Haviser). His research has spanned the West African Late Stone Age, the origins of African agriculture and social complexity, and the archaeology of slavery. Recent work includes a co-edited volume on the concept of ethnicity in African anthropology and archaeology (in press). He is currently writing a monograph on Bamana Segou and the archaeology of African political traditions.
Title: Re-Mapping West Africa’s Ancient Empires
2012 marked the
100th anniversary of the publication of Maurice Delafosse’s
monumental Haut-Sénégal-Niger, a work
which provided the first comprehensive history of the Niger, Senegal
and Volta river basins from the first
millennium AD onwards. Delafosse not only defined the principal polities by
which we sub-divide western Sahelian history, he supplied a set of territorial
expectations for each of these polities. These old attributions have hobbled
fresh research for decades; leaving us with borders and points drawn on maps in
every textbook whose basis is largely accumulated myth. In this lecture, Kevin
MacDonald will unravel long held certainties concerning the location of
capitals and heartlands of the two great empires of Ghana and Mali. The data
used will be largely archaeological, drawn in good measure from his own
excavations and surveys, interwoven with elements of oral tradition and text.

