CYPRIOT SANCTUARIES IN CONTEXT: TOPOGRAPHY AND MATERIAL CULTURE
An online module organised by the Humboldt-Universität Berlin and the Unlocking Sacred Landscapes of Cyprus (UnSaLa-CY) project, summer semester 2019-2020
 
Training of undergraduate and postgraduate students from the University of Cyprus and the Humboldt-Universität Berlin on Cypriot sacred landscapes and their related material culture.
 

 
GIS WORKSHOP AND ECONOMIC ARCHAEOLOGY: INTER- AND INTRA-SITE APPROACHES (BONN)
A Workshop organised by the RTG 1878: Archaeology of Pre-Modern Economies in collaboration with the Unlocking Sacred Landscapes Network
19th and 20th of May 2017; Universität Bonn, Abteilung für Altamerikanistik, Raum 1.002
 
The workshop aims to:
  • provide the Archaeology of Pre-Modern Economies students an introduction to Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and their potential in grasping issues related to economic archaeology in general, and spatial analysis of ritual and cult more specifically;
  • provide the new students with the opportunity to discuss informally – in a friendly and collegial environment – the possibility of applying inter- and intra-site GIS analyses to their work;
  • provide the more advanced students with the opportunity to present – in a friendly and collegial environment – their ideas or their preliminary GIS results, and to get feedback and stimuli from various GIS specialists;
  • provide a forum through which the Archaeology of Pre-Modern Economies Research Training Group and the Unlocking Sacred Landscapes Network have the opportunity of networking with other projects/scholars in Germany and beyond.
For more information and the programme of the workshop click here.
 

 
SETTLED AND SACRED LANDSCAPES OF CYPRUS (SeSaLaC)
An Archaeological Intensive Survey Project of the University of Cyprus
 
Training of undergraduate and postgraduate students from the University of Cyprus in field-survey methodology and techniques, including the topographical and architectural recording of archaeological sites and monuments through the technical equipment and support of the Artefact and Landscape Studies Laboratory (ArtLandS Lab.). Click here for more.