De Waal, Maaike S. (Dr.)

Maaike S. De Waal (PhD, Leiden University) is assistant professor and head of the Field Research and Education Centre at the Faculty of Archaeology of Leiden University (the Netherlands). She is also a partner in ARGEOgraph, an archaeological company specializing in geoinformatics in archaeology. Previously, she was lecturing in archaeology at the University of the West Indies (Barbados). Her research interests include archaeological heritage management, applied archaeology, landscape archaeology, and Caribbean archaeology and heritage. ‘Pre-Colonial and Post-Contact Archaeology in Barbados: past, present and future research directions’ (De Waal, M.S., Finneran, N., Reilly, M., Armstrong, D.V. and Farmer, K., Sidestone Press, 2019) is one of her recent publications.

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Depaermentier, Margaux L. C. (Dr.)

Margaux L. C. Depaermentier’s academic career began with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Art History and Archaeology at the Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne (France), followed by a Master of Arts degree in Early Medieval and Medieval Archaeology at the Alberts-Ludwigs-Universität in Freiburg (Germany). She obtained her PhD at the University of Basel (Switzerland), where her dissertation, “Late Antique and Early Medieval Social Structure in Basel from an Archaeological and Scientific Perspective,” advanced our understanding of Late Antique and Early Medieval societies in this border region.

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Dézsi, Attila (Dr.)

Attila Dézsi, an archaeologist, studied Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology in Hamburg and Vienna. Since 2020, he has been a research associate at the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments at the Regional Council of Stuttgart, where he is involved in the inventory project “KZ-Komplex-Natzweiler: Denkmalfachliche Evaluierung der Außenlager und Arbeitsstätten in Baden-Württemberg.”

Additionally, he conducts research as a research associate at the University of Tübingen in the Collaborative Research Center 1070 “RessourcenKulturen” on the German immigrant colony Nueva Germania in 19th century Paraguay. In 2023, he defended his doctoral dissertation on Contemporary Archaeology at sites of protest, which included investigations of the anti-nuclear protest village “Republik Freies Wendland”. The dissertation was awarded three academic prizes: Studienpreis der VGH Stiftung für Archäologie 2024, the Deutschen Studienpreis für Archäologie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Ur- und Frühgeschichte, and the Barbara-Scholkmann-Förderpreis für Historische Archäologie.

His research focuses on the democratization of archaeology, methodology and theory of Historical Archaeology, as well as sites of Nazi terror and alternative movements.

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Dijkstra, Menno (Dr.)

Menno Dijkstra (1971) is senior staff member of the ‘field projects department’ of the Amsterdam Archaeological Centre. He specializes in Medieval and Post-Medieval archaeology, especially the Early and High Medieval Period of north-west Europe (AD 450-1250). His PhD research is completed in 2011, containing a study of the Late Roman and Early Medieval habitation history of the estuaries of the Rhine and Meuse.

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Dijkstra, Tamara M. MA (MA)

Tamara M. Dijkstra is in the final stages of her PhD-project at the department of Greek Archaeology of the University of Groningen. She studies social structure and identities in Achaea in the Hellenistic and Roman period, by analysing continuity and change in practices of death, burial, and commemoration. In addition to her PhD-project, works as an archaeologist in the Halos Archaeological Project in Thessaly.

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Dillen, Wout (Dr.)

Wout Dillen is a postdoctoral researcher working at the University of Antwerp as the coordinator of the Antwerp division of the DARIAH-VL consortium of DARIAH-BE. In 2015 he defended a Ph.D. thesis on ‘Digital Scholarly Editing for the Genetic Orientation.’

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De Waal, Maaike S. (Dr.)

Maaike S. De Waal (PhD, Leiden University) is assistant professor and head of the Field Research and Education Centre at the Faculty of Archaeology of Leiden University (the Netherlands). She is also a partner in ARGEOgraph, an archaeological company specializing in geoinformatics in archaeology. Previously, she was lecturing in archaeology at the University of the West Indies (Barbados). Her research interests include archaeological heritage management, applied archaeology, landscape archaeology, and Caribbean archaeology and heritage. ‘Pre-Colonial and Post-Contact Archaeology in Barbados: past, present and future research directions’ (De Waal, M.S., Finneran, N., Reilly, M., Armstrong, D.V. and Farmer, K., Sidestone Press, 2019) is one of her recent publications.

read more

Depaermentier, Margaux L. C. (Dr.)

Margaux L. C. Depaermentier’s academic career began with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Art History and Archaeology at the Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne (France), followed by a Master of Arts degree in Early Medieval and Medieval Archaeology at the Alberts-Ludwigs-Universität in Freiburg (Germany). She obtained her PhD at the University of Basel (Switzerland), where her dissertation, “Late Antique and Early Medieval Social Structure in Basel from an Archaeological and Scientific Perspective,” advanced our understanding of Late Antique and Early Medieval societies in this border region.

read more

Dézsi, Attila (Dr.)

Attila Dézsi, an archaeologist, studied Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology in Hamburg and Vienna. Since 2020, he has been a research associate at the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments at the Regional Council of Stuttgart, where he is involved in the inventory project “KZ-Komplex-Natzweiler: Denkmalfachliche Evaluierung der Außenlager und Arbeitsstätten in Baden-Württemberg.”

Additionally, he conducts research as a research associate at the University of Tübingen in the Collaborative Research Center 1070 “RessourcenKulturen” on the German immigrant colony Nueva Germania in 19th century Paraguay. In 2023, he defended his doctoral dissertation on Contemporary Archaeology at sites of protest, which included investigations of the anti-nuclear protest village “Republik Freies Wendland”. The dissertation was awarded three academic prizes: Studienpreis der VGH Stiftung für Archäologie 2024, the Deutschen Studienpreis für Archäologie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Ur- und Frühgeschichte, and the Barbara-Scholkmann-Förderpreis für Historische Archäologie.

His research focuses on the democratization of archaeology, methodology and theory of Historical Archaeology, as well as sites of Nazi terror and alternative movements.

read more

Dijkstra, Menno (Dr.)

Menno Dijkstra (1971) is senior staff member of the ‘field projects department’ of the Amsterdam Archaeological Centre. He specializes in Medieval and Post-Medieval archaeology, especially the Early and High Medieval Period of north-west Europe (AD 450-1250). His PhD research is completed in 2011, containing a study of the Late Roman and Early Medieval habitation history of the estuaries of the Rhine and Meuse.

read more

Dijkstra, Tamara M. MA (MA)

Tamara M. Dijkstra is in the final stages of her PhD-project at the department of Greek Archaeology of the University of Groningen. She studies social structure and identities in Achaea in the Hellenistic and Roman period, by analysing continuity and change in practices of death, burial, and commemoration. In addition to her PhD-project, works as an archaeologist in the Halos Archaeological Project in Thessaly.

read more

Dillen, Wout (Dr.)

Wout Dillen is a postdoctoral researcher working at the University of Antwerp as the coordinator of the Antwerp division of the DARIAH-VL consortium of DARIAH-BE. In 2015 he defended a Ph.D. thesis on ‘Digital Scholarly Editing for the Genetic Orientation.’

read more




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