Difference between revisions of "Archaeology"

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The Chair of Archaeology was created in 1925.
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Although elements of archaeology had long been taught at Edinburgh University as part of other disciplines, the formal teaching of archaeology began in 1912 with the inauguration of the Munro Lectures. These were endowed by Robert Munro (1835-1920), a distinguished amateur archaeologist who himself delivered the first series of lectures (on 'Palaeolithic Man and terramara settlements in Europe'). A Chair of Archaelogy (sometimes referred to as Prehistoric Archaeology) was created in 1925, by means of an endowment bequeathed by the Hon. [[John Abercromby, 5th Baron Abercromby of Aboukir and Tullibody (1841-1924)|John Abercromby (1841-1924)]], author of the ground-breaking ''Study of the Bronze Age Pottery of Great Britain and Ireland''. The first incumbent of the Abercromby Chair was the Australian scholar Vere Gordon Childe (1892-1957).
  
 
== Professors of Archaeology ==
 
== Professors of Archaeology ==

Revision as of 10:37, 4 July 2016

Although elements of archaeology had long been taught at Edinburgh University as part of other disciplines, the formal teaching of archaeology began in 1912 with the inauguration of the Munro Lectures. These were endowed by Robert Munro (1835-1920), a distinguished amateur archaeologist who himself delivered the first series of lectures (on 'Palaeolithic Man and terramara settlements in Europe'). A Chair of Archaelogy (sometimes referred to as Prehistoric Archaeology) was created in 1925, by means of an endowment bequeathed by the Hon. John Abercromby (1841-1924), author of the ground-breaking Study of the Bronze Age Pottery of Great Britain and Ireland. The first incumbent of the Abercromby Chair was the Australian scholar Vere Gordon Childe (1892-1957).

Professors of Archaeology