451 search results for “ancient geen” in the Staff website
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    Archaeologists bring experts on human evolution together with Kiem grant
        
    
Leiden University's Kiem grants aim to help develop new interdisciplinary and interfaculty collaborations and encounters. In the first round, a Kiem grant was awarded to a group of researchers from the Faculty of Archaeology, the Faculty of Social Sciences, and the LUMC for the organisation of a symposium…
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    Report LUCAS Conference Bodies Matter 15-16 April 2021
        
    
Over two days in the middle of April the Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society hosted the virtual Bodies Matter conference. Almost two years in the making, the conference was an exciting and timely opportunity to discuss and debate histories, theories and practices of bodies.
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    Amanda Henry appointed Full Professor in Evolution of Hominin Diets
        
    
As of 1 September, archaeologist Amanda Henry has been appointed Full Professor at the Faculty of Archaeology, where she will hold the chair in Evolution in Hominin Diets. The appointment marks a new chapter in her academic journey, building on her longstanding research into ancient human diets and…
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    Workshop Early Photography of the Middle East - In Contact with Collections
        
    
On Thursday, May 16, Leiden University Libraries is organizing a workshop on early photography of the Middle East. In the workshop, curator Maartje van den Heuvel shows photos of three adventurous Dutch nineteenth-century travel and photography pioneers. They created beautiful photos and photo albums…
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    Dr. Jonathan Singerton talks about Central Europe and the 19th century World
        
    
In December 2024, Dr. Jonathan Singerton (University of Amsterdam) was the featured guest speaker at the last lunch talk of the Fall 2025 semester. A full house assembled to hear Dr. Singerton take us on a journey across the Habsburg Empire and to spots far-flung from Vienna. Dr. Singerton told us a…
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    Annual Overview 2024
        
    
2024 was an eventful year for the Faculty of Humanities. Despite becoming the centre of political discussion and budget cuts as faculty ourselves, exceptional research projects were carried out and new initiatives were launched.
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    Director of Operations Saskia Goedhard: 'Nice that the faculty is such a complex organisation'
        
    
Saskia Goedhard was previously director of operations at the Hogeschool van Amsterdam and the UvA. Since April, she has brought her expertise to the Faculty of Humanities as director of business operations. 'Good business management is like water from a tap. You only notice it when it’s no longer th…
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    New Faculty of Humanities spending reduction plan
        
    
The Faculty of Humanities has shared a new spending reduction plan with its students and staff. Although the plans are less sweeping than previous ones, we still need to make painful decisions: the proposal to scrap the Bachelor’s in Italian Language and Culture, for example.
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    More than just blue domes and camels: new Louvre film on Uzbek artefacts
        
    
Terracotta pottery, precious ikat fabrics and the bazaars where these goods are sold: all these can be seen in a new Louvre film premiering on Friday 9 December. University lecturer Elena Paskaleva collaborated on the film Uzbekistan a timeless journey in Central Asia about Uzbek artefacts.
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    Biology student Martijn Verkuilen wins Unilever Research Prize
        
    
Martijn Verkuilen is the winner of the Unilever Research Prize 2022. By transferring DNA from a plant into yeast, he made the first move to produce a new drug for type 2 diabetes. He collected his prize in Wageningen on 24 November.
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    New technique makes it easier to determine how our ancestors used fire
        
    
The use of fire can tell us a lot about human evolution. Archaeologist Femke Reidsma has developed a more accurate technique to identify how our ancestors used fire. Existing archaeological studies will need to be revised. Reidsma’s study was published in Nature Scientific Reports on 2 November.
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    Podcast tips for Pentecost
        
    
Are you looking for some listening material for the upcoming long weekend? Staff members and alumni of the Faculty of Humanities have been creating various podcasts over the last few months. A selection is shown here:
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    Leiden University College: Another quality seal for one of Europe's top liberal arts and sciences programmes
        
    
For the eleventh time in a row, Leiden University’s unique liberal arts and sciences programme has been awarded the ‘Top Rated Programme’ quality seal by Keuzegids universiteiten 2024.
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    Introducing: Marijke Kooijman
        
    
Marijke Kooijman recently joined the Institute for History as a postdoctoral researcher within the NWO-funded project 'Roman Fake News? Documentary Fictions in the Roman Empire' under the supervision of Rens Tacoma. Below, she introduces herself.
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    Antjie Krog writer in residence at Leiden University this autumn
        
    
South African poet Antjie Krog will be the writer in residence at Leiden University in autumn 2021. Krog is famous for her poetry collections and books, which are often inspired by the history of South Africa. In her role as writer in residence, she will give the annual Albert Verwey Lecture and a series…
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    Radio astronomers bypass disturbing Earth's atmosphere with new calibration technique
        
    
An international team of researchers led by astronomers from Leiden University (the Netherlands) has produced the first sharp radio maps of the universe at low frequencies. Thanks to a new calibration technique, they bypassed the disturbances of the Earth's ionosphere. They used the new method to study…
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    Leiden archaeologists play a role in repatriating Central and South American heritage
        
    
On 3 September 2025, more than 30 archaeological objects were returned to Peru, Panama and Costa Rica. The objects come from a private collection belonging to the descendants of physician and amateur archaeologist Dr Hans Feriz. In her will, his daughter stipulated that the objects collected by her…
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    10 maart: Universiteit Leiden start estafettestaking tegen bezuinigingen
        
    
Medewerkers van de Universiteit Leiden trappen maandag 10 maart de estafettestaking af van de Nederlandse universiteiten tegen de kabinetsbezuinigingen.
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    Vidi grant for seven researchers from Leiden University
        
    
From malaria parasites as a vaccine to how top-level bureaucrats reach their decisions: seven researchers from Leiden University have received a Vidi grant from the Dutch Research Council (NWO). This 800,000-euro grant will enable them to develop their own innovative line of research over the next five…
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    KNAW Early Career Award for Alisa van de Haar: ‘I want to take a more positive approach to migration and multilingualism’
        
    
Alisa van de Haar is one of three humanities scholars to win a KNAW Early Career Award this year. The university lecturer of Ancient French Literature is receiving the award for her innovative research on multilingualism and migration. 'It would be nice to use this to set up a project with students.…
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    Announcement Fellow Program 2022 'The Iranian Highlands'
        
    
For 2022, The Iranian-German project 'The Iranian Highlands: Resilience and Integration of Premodern Societies' announces the second round of fellowship grants. The fellowship is open for both iranian and non-iranian researchers, especially in archaeology but also in other interdisciplinary fields focussing…
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    Archaeologist Mink van IJzendoorn receives LUF grant to investigate late amphorae
        
    
Amphorae are usually associated with the ancient Phoenicians, Greeks and Romans. ‘Yet, in some cases, such as Byzantium, amphorae existed for centuries after Antiquity. Another, even later instance of the amphora's afterlife can be found in the Iberian Peninsula, from where the latest specimens…
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    All Roads Lead to Rome? New Reflections on Ecology and Mobility in the Roman Empire
    
    
Lecture, Global Questions Seminar
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    Research Seminar
    
    
Conference, Research Seminar
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    Disability and Healing in Greek and Roman Myth
    
    
Lecture, Ancient History Research Seminar
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    DUSANE 2024
    
    
Symposium
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    Greedy Supermassive Black Holes
    
    
Lecture, Oort lecture
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    Soldiers of Fortune at Home: Remarks on the Social and Economic Footprint of Cretan Mercenary Wealth in the Hellenistic Period
    
    
Lecture, Ancient History Research Seminar
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    Water Legacy: Mayan world meets the Netherlands
    
    
Lecture, Faculty Lecture and Photo Exposition
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    Forum Antiquum Lecture: Plato’s winged chariot in Coetzee’s Jesus Trilogy: Literature’s journey toward transcendence
    
    
Lecture
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    13th International Congress of Egyptologists, 2023
    
    
Conference
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    MS/MS-Based Bone CHIP Species Identification
    
    
PhD defence
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    RMO avond: Echoes of the Nile
    
    
Festival
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    Tradition and Performance of Zoroastrian High Rituals
    
    
Lecture
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    The Processes of Dying of the Greeks from the Hellenistic Period to the Early Empire
    
    
Lecture, Ancient History Research Seminar
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    Forum Antiquum Lectures Spring 2023: The Revisionist Muse: Recent retellings of Greco-Roman myths from a female perspective
    
    
Lecture
 - Unification of the Mediterranean World Research Seminars 2022-2023
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    Exposed: interdisciplinary approaches to the Greek and Roman body
    
    
Conference
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    Evening of the Middle Eastern Collections & Middle Eastern Library
    
    
Arts and culture
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    Dutch Excavations in the Eastern Nile Delta
    
    
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
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    Archaeological Forum: Gül Aktürk en Murat Dirican
    
    
Lecture
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    QAnon and Alien Gods: Plausibility Construction in the Cultic Milieu (11th Leiden Symposium on New Religiosity)
    
    
Lecture, Symposium
 - ‘Theatres of Law: Policing, Prosecution, and Performance from Plato to YouTube’ – Workshop with Julie Stone Peters (Columbia University) and
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    Looking over the shoulders of medieval readers
        
    
What did medieval scholars think of the books they read? In her inaugural lecture, Professor Mariken Teeuwen will talk about the texts they wrote in the margin.
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    Herta Mohr: Headstrong female scientist in a man's world
        
    
As a twelve-year-old girl, Nicky van de Beek became intrigued by the tomb chapels in Saqqara, Egypt. Now she is doing her PhD on them, just like another Leiden Egyptologist decades earlier. Herta Mohr persevered with her research during World War II. Now she is the namesake of the first Leiden building…
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    Book Landscapes of Survival sheds new light on the habitation of the Jordan deserts
        
    
December 2020 saw the crowning publication of the Landscapes of Survival project by Professor Peter Akkermans. Its main topic is human habitation in marginal environments like the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula. ‘The people living here built their own society, and they would not have viewed it as…
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    The Linguistics Olympiad final is coming up soon: ‘The questions shouldn’t be too easy’
        
    
On Saturday 16 April, secondary school pupils will once again have a chance to sink their teeth into the hardest language-related questions during the final of the Linguistics Olympiad. Professor Sasha Lubotsky and PhD student Cid Swanenvleugel are both former Olympiad winners. Now they are involved…
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    Vidi grants for eight researchers from Leiden University
        
    
Eight scientists from Leiden University have been awarded a grant by the Dutch Research Council (NWO). With this Vidi funding, the researchers can set up an innovative line of research and further expand their own research group over the next five years.
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    Six NWO grants for FGW researchers: this is what the scientists are going to do
        
    
Six projects from the Faculty of Humanities recently received grants of up to 750,000 euros from the NWO Open Competition. Researchers involved tell how they will spend this money.
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    Break the familiar routine of papers and write a blog post! ‘This way you can be more involved with the subject’
        
    
Exam, paper, exam, paper. A familiar, though sometimes little unexciting, routine for students. That is why Film and Literary students Sietske de Haan and Wouter Dijkman decided to write a blog post for the course Interculturality. Their impressive achievement was rewarded with a publication on science…