Susan K HarringtonFSA is an early-medieval archaeologist and Honorary Senior Lecturer atUniversity College London.[1]
Susan Harrington | |
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Academic background | |
Thesis | Aspects of gender and craft production in early Anglo-Saxon England with reference to the kingdom of Kent (2003) |
Doctoral advisor | Martin Welch |
Academic work | |
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Institutions |
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Career
editFrom 2006 to 2009 she was the research assistant on theLeverhulme Trust funded project 'Beyond the Tribal Hidage: Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in southern England AD 400-750'.[2] She subsequently was part of the research team on the 'People and place: the making of the Kingdom of Northumbria AD 300-800' project at theUniversity of Durham, also funded by the Leverhulme Trust.[3]
She was elected as a fellow of theSociety of Antiquaries of London on 9 June 2011.[4]
Select publications
edit- Brookes, S., Harrington, S., and Welch, M. 2005. "Documenting the dead: creating an online census of Anglo-Saxon burials from Kent",Archaeology International 9. 28-31doi:10.5334/ai.0908
- Brookes, S. and Harrington, S. 2010.The kingdom and people of Kent : AD 400-1066 : their history and archaeology.
- Harrington, S. 2016. "From warp and weft to spear and spindle: Gender identity and textile manufacture in early Anglo-Saxon England", in Sophia E. Kelly and Traci Ardren (eds)Gendered Labor in Specialized Economies: Archaeological Perspectives on Female and Male Work. University Press of Colorado.
References
edit- ^"Susan Harrington". UCL. Retrieved2 March 2020.
- ^"Beyond the Tribal Hidage: Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in southern England AD 400-750". UCL. Retrieved2 March 2020.
- ^"People and place: the making of the Kingdom of Northumbria AD 300-800"(PDF).Medieval Archaeology. Vol. 54. Autumn 2015.
- ^"Fellows Directory - Harrington". Society of Antiquaries of London. Retrieved2 March 2020.