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El. knyga: Winifred Lamb: Aegean Prehistorian and Museum Curator

(University of Kent / University of East Anglia)
  • Formatas: 284 pages
  • Serija: Archaeological Lives
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Sep-2018
  • Leidėjas: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781784918804
  • Formatas: 284 pages
  • Serija: Archaeological Lives
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Sep-2018
  • Leidėjas: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781784918804

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The first comprehensive biography of pioneering archaeologist and museum curator Winnifred Lamb, who was honorary keeper of Greek antiquities at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge in the four decades immediately following the First World War.

Winifred Lamb was a pioneering archaeologist in the Aegean and Anatolia. She studied classics at Newnham College, Cambridge, and subsequently served in naval intelligence alongside J. D. Beazley during the final stages of the First World War. As war drew to a close, Sydney Cockerell, Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, invited Lamb to be the honorary keeper of Greek antiquities. Over the next 40 years she created a prehistoric gallery, marking the university’s contribution to excavations in the Aegean, and developed the museum’s holdings of classical bronzes and Athenian figure-decorated pottery. Lamb formed a parallel career excavating in the Aegean. She was admitted as a student of the British School at Athens and served as assistant director on the Mycenae excavations under Alan Wace and Carl Blegen. After further work at Sparta and on prehistoric mounds in Macedonia, Lamb identified and excavated a major Bronze Age site at Thermi on Lesbos. She conducted a brief excavation on Chios before directing a major project at Kusura in Turkey. She was recruited for the Turkish language section of the BBC during the Second World War, and after the cessation of hostilities took an active part in the creation of the British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara.

Recenzijos

'Gill has produced a solid biography about one of the most important women in the history of British archaeology in Greece and Turkey during the first half of the 20th century. [ The book is] destined to become a reference work for anyone studying the development of Classical studies at one of Englands premier universities or the history of British archaeology in the eastern Mediterranean.' - Natalia Vogeikoff Brogan (2019): Bryn Mawr Classical Review





'Gills well-researched biography is an important contribution highlighting the important role played by individuals of influence, such as Winifred Lamb, and of the British institutions that they were connected to in the development of the disciplines of classical studies and archaeology (in this case, The Fitzwilliam Museum and Cambridge University). [ The book highlights] the accomplishments of one of archaeologys great, but rather obscure protagonists, while at the same time reminding us of how far our discipline has progressed within the last two centuries, and how we, in the present, are paving the way for more changes to come.' - Lita Tzortzopoulou-Gregory (2022): Journal of Greek Archaeology

Abbreviations iv
Acknowledgements v
Introduction 1(3)
Chapter 1 The Lamb Family and Early Years
4(16)
The Lamb family
4(3)
Edmund Lamb
7(2)
The Winkworth family
9(3)
Borden Wood
12(8)
Chapter 2 Cambridge and Classics
20(14)
Life at Newnham
20(3)
Archaeological fieldwork
23(3)
The wider university
26(2)
Glimpses of the war
28(3)
Cambridge and Part 2 of the Tripos
31(3)
Chapter 3 The Hope Vases and Naval Intelligence
34(28)
The Hope Vases
34(4)
Room 40
38(8)
Postwar life
46(1)
Classical Archaeology and the Fitzwilliam Museum
47(5)
The Ricketts and Shannon Collection
52(1)
Honorary Keeper at the Fitzwilliam Museum
53(2)
First visit to Greece
55(5)
Life in England
60(2)
Chapter 4 The First Year in Athens (1920--21)
62(25)
The British School at Athens reopens
63(1)
Arrival in Athens
64(4)
First excursion: Delphi
68(2)
Athens: City of mourning and political change
70(2)
Walking Tours in Attica
72(3)
Museum studies
75(3)
Life at the School
78(2)
Crete
80(1)
Peloponnese
81(2)
Mycenae
83(4)
Chapter 5 Prehistory and the Fitzwilliam Museum
87(17)
The forming of the classical collections
87(2)
The Cockerell era
89(1)
The Prehistoric Gallery
90(7)
Cyprus
97(1)
Winifred Lamb's visits to Cambridge
98(3)
The Fitzwilliam Goddess
101(3)
Chapter 6 Mycenae, Sparta and Macedonia
104(32)
Mycenae
105(8)
Greece and Turkey
113(2)
Sparta
115(8)
Macedonia
123(5)
Thermon, Gulf of Corinth
128(1)
Aitolia and Epirus
129(7)
Chapter 7 The Fitzwilliam Museum: Developing the Classical
Collections
136(1)
Greek and Roman Bronzes
136(5)
Greek pottery
141(10)
Classical Gems and Jewellery
151(2)
Etruscan and Italian antiquities
153(1)
Other acquisitions and loans
154(4)
Chapter 8 The Eastern Aegean: Lesbos and Chios
158(23)
Methymna
159(2)
Thermi
161(9)
Antissa
170(4)
Lesbos and beyond
174(1)
Chios
175(4)
Jubilee Celebrations of the British School at Athens
179(2)
Chapter 9 Anatolia and Kusura
181(12)
Early visits to Anatolia
181(6)
Excavating Kusura
187(4)
Research on Anatolian Archaeology
191(2)
Chapter 10 The War Years
193(21)
Britain at War
193(6)
The fall of Greece and Crete
199(2)
Turkey and the BBC
201(9)
Injury and the end of the war
210(4)
Chapter 11 The British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara
214(19)
Anatolian Archaeology
214(6)
The Fitzwilliam Museum
220(6)
Lamb as benefactor
226(3)
The Midhurst Church
229(1)
Final years
230(1)
Lamb's Legacy
231(2)
Bibliography 233(33)
Index 266
David Gill is Professor of Archaeological Heritage at the University of Suffolk and Visiting Research Fellow in the School of History at the University of East Anglia. He is a former Rome Scholar at the British School at Rome, and Sir James Knott Fellow at Newcastle University. He was responsible for the Greek and Roman collections at the Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge, before moving to Swansea University as Reader in Mediterranean Archaeology. In 2012 he received the Outstanding Public Service Award from the Archaeological Institute of America for his research on cultural property.