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The material culture of Qaryat al Faw, a late antique oasis in Arabia

05 February 2025, 4:10 pm–5:30 pm

Poster for UCL Institute of Archaeology Thematic Research Seminars Term II, 2024-25 on 'Material Worlds' - green banner UCL logo and the picture of black and red/brown painted pottery

The third seminar in the UCL Institute of Archaeology Thematic Research Seminar series for Term II, 2024-25, will be given by Juan de Lara (University of Oxford) on 5 February.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

UCL staff | UCL students | UCL alumni

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Dr Veronica Occari

Location

Room 612
UCL Institute of Archaeology
31-34 Gordon Square
London
WC1H 0PY
United Kingdom

UCL Institute of Archaeology Thematic Research Seminars Programme | Term II, 2024-25

The Term II seminar series will highlight thematic research looking at 'Material Worlds' and 'Power and Difference'. These are scheduled to be in-person events.

Seminars on 'Material Worlds' will explore research related to areas including artefact typology and beyond to technology and practices of production; movement and mobility of objects through trade and exchange; cultural memory, archaeologies of contextual meaning, sociologies and anthropologies of art as well as materials analysis of lithics, metals, glass, ceramics and other artificial materials; imaging of organic remains (environmental, artefactual, and for conservation treatments) and the interface between materials analysis and conservation science.

Those seminars on 'Power and Difference' will highlight research related to the origins of humanity and the dynamics of civilizations; the emergence, rise, persistence and collapse of complex societies; inequality and political organisation; early Empires, including Assyria, the Roman Empire, the early Islamic empires, the Inca empire, and the post-classic Maya; the archaeology of slavery; the symbolic significances of places, the construction and use of ritual and funerary landscapes and burial rites as well as critical perspectives on the interpretation of cultural heritage, underlying ethics and philosophy of past and present cultural conservation; the relationship between heritage, museums and the development of concepts of race and culture; contemporary racial and social inequalities; post-conflict heritage policy, conflict archaeology, and the politics of heritage in disputed territories and in former colonial societies and decolonising conservation,

Wednesdays, doors open 4pm for a 4.10pm start

[19 February: Reading Week - no seminar]

  • 26 February: Speaker tbc
  • 5 March: Speaker tbc
  • 12 March: Zhengyuan Wang - title tbc
  • 19 March: David Wengrow - title tbc