The Dorothy Garrod Photographic Archive
The Dorothy Garrod Photographic Archive
This website gives research access to around 750 negatives taken by Dorothy Garrod
(1892–1968) mostly relating to archaeological research in present-day
Israel in the early 1930s. Garrod is a major figure, both in British
archaeology and academia more generally, having been the first
prehistorian, and first woman, to be elected to a professorship (Disney
Professor of Archaeology) at Cambridge University, a post which she held
from 1939 until 1952. Trained by R. R. Marett at Oxford and the Abbé
Henri Breuil in France, she was famed for her excavations in Gibraltar,
Palestine, Southern Kurdistan, Anatolia, and Bulgaria. She discovered
the well-preserved skull fragments of 'Abel', a Neanderthal child, in
Gibraltar, identified the Natufian culture while excavating Shukbah near
Jerusalem, led long term excavations at Mt Carmel, established the
Palaeolithic succession for that important region and then travelled, in
1938, to explore the important Palaeolithic cave of Bacho Kiro in
Bulgaria.
Her important collection of original negatives was donated to the
Pitt Rivers Museum by her prehistorian colleague and executor Suzanne
Cassou de Saint Mathurin in 1986. A further important collection of
Garrod's prints and documents exists in the Mathurin collection at the
Musée des Antiquités Nationales, St Germain-en-Laye, France.
At present the collection is documented briefly according to original
notes. It is hoped that this website will allow researchers to help
improve the descriptions and interpretations of the material.
Correspondence:
ms-photo.colls@prm.ox.ac.uk
Source: http://web.prm.ox.ac.uk/garrod/index.html#ixzz30TmetRfm
The Dorothy Garrod image gallery is organized according to accession
number and is not necessarily chronological or grouped by archaeological
site. Click on a thumbnail to see detail page, with options to view a
larger image and download it for academic research and personal use
only. All images are copyright Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford.
No comments:
Post a Comment