Teaching
Modules for 2024-25
ACE MA AND MSC DISSERTATION
Module code: ALGY600
Role: Teaching
ANCIENT WARFARE
Module code: ALGY210
Role: Teaching
ARTEFACTS AND TECHNOLOGY
Module code: ALGY250
Role: Teaching
BRONZE AGE CIVILIZATIONS: MESOPOTAMIA AND THE MEDITERRANEAN
Module code: ALGY106
Role: Module Co-ordinator
DEATH AND MORTUARY PRACTICES
Module code: ALGY224
Role: Teaching
EXTENDED ESSAY IN CHINESE ARCHAEOLOGY AND HERITAGE
Module code: ALGY285
Role: Module Co-ordinator
RESEARCHING URBAN COMMUNITIES IN THE NEAR EAST, 5000-500 B.C
Module code: ALGY646
Role: Teaching
THE FIRST CIVILISATION: MESOPOTAMIA AND THE SUMERIANS
Module code: ALGY386
Role: Teaching
THE ORIGINS OF AGRICULTURE AND SEDENTISM IN THE NEAR EAST
Module code: ALGY356
Role: Module Co-ordinator
THE PRACTICE OF ARCHAEOLOGY
Module code: ALGY102
Role: Teaching
Supervised Theses
- A critical assessment of Sir John Thomas Jones’ ‘Journals of the Sieges undertaken by the allies in Spain in the years 1811 and 1812’
- Animal and Human Symbolism in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic of the Near East
- Comparative Study of Divine Kingship in Ur III Dynasty Mesopotamia and China in the Shang Dynasty
- Feeding the people: the social and economic role of the granary in Ur III Umma
- Prehistoric vegetation change and woodland management in central Anatolia: late Pleistocene-mid Holocene anthracological remains from the Konya Plain
- Revisiting Tell Deir 'Alla: a reinterpretation of the Early Iron Age deposits
- Structured deposition and the interpretation of ritual in the Near Eastern Neolithic: a new methodology
- The Iron Age pottery from Alalakh/Tell Atchana: a morphological and functional analysis
- The diffusion of Neolithic practices from Anatolia to Europe. A contextual study of residential and construction practices 8,500-5,500 BC cal.
- Uncovering a Community - Lifestyles and Death Ways at Late Neolithic Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria
- Warfare in Ur III Dynasty A Comprehensive Study about Military and Diplomacy
- ZOOARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR HUMAN-ANIMAL INTERACTIONS AT THE NEOLITHIC BONCUKLU HÖYÜK, CENTRAL ANATOLIA