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European Association of Archaeologists

The European Association of Archaeologists (EAA) is a membership-based, not-for-profit association, open to archaeologists and other related or interested individuals or bodies in Europe and beyond. It was founded in 1994 at an inaugural meeting in Ljubljana, Slovenia, where its Statutes were formally approved,[1] and recognized by the Council of Europe in 1999.[2] EAA has had over 15,000 members on its database from 75 countries. EAA holds an annual conference (Annual Meetings) and publishes the flagship journal, the European Journal of Archaeology. The EAA also publishes an in-house newsletter, The European Archaeologist (TEA), and two monograph series (Themes in Contemporary Archaeology and Elements: The Archaeology of Europe). The registered office of the association is in Prague, Czech Republic.

European Association of Archaeologists
Location within Czech Republic
European Association of Archaeologists (Europe)
AbbreviationEAA
Formation1994
TypeNonprofit
HeadquartersPrague, Czech Republic
Coordinates50°05′15″N 14°25′17″E / 50.08750°N 14.42139°E / 50.08750; 14.42139
Region served
Europe
FieldsArchaeology, Cultural heritage management
Membership (2023)
3.973
Official language
En
President
Eszter Bánffy
Websitehttps://www.e-a-a.org

Mission edit

The EAA offers Statutes,[3] Code of practice and Principles,[4] and code of practice for fieldwork training.[5] The EAA further promotes international cooperation though interactions with Affiliate Organizations.[6] In 1999, the EAA was granted consultative status with the Council of Europe, which in 2003 was upgraded to participatory status.[7]

Governance edit

The EAA is governed by an Executive Board elected by full Members of the Association. The Executive Board comprises three or four officers (president, incoming president, treasurer, and secretary) and six ordinary members.[8] The current president is Eszter Bánffy and former presidents include:[9]

Awards edit

The EAA awards prizes and honours relevant to its aims. These include the European Archaeological Heritage Prize, the EAA Student Award, the EAA Book Prize and Honorary membership in the EAA.[10]

European Archaeological Heritage Prize edit

The EAA instituted the European Archaeological Heritage Prize in 1999. An independent committee awards the prize annually to an outstanding individual, institution, (local or regional) government or a (European or international) officer or body[11]

  • 1999: M.M. Carrilho, Minister of Culture from Portugal
  • 2000: Margareta Biörnstad, former state antiquarian, Sweden
  • 2001: Otto Braasch, member of the Aerial Archaeological Group (AARG), Germany
  • 2002: Henry Cleere, ICOMOS Paris
  • 2003: Viktor Trifonov, Institute of Material Culture, Russian Academy of Sciences in Sankt Petersburg
  • 2004: Illicit Antiquities Research Centre at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge
  • 2005: Kristian Kristiansen, Sweden
  • 2006: John Coles, UK
  • 2007: Siegmar von Schnurbein, Germany
  • 2008: Jean-Paul Demoule, France
  • 2009: Ulrich Ruoff, Switzerland
  • 2010: David John Breeze, Scotland
  • 2011: Girolamo Ferdinando, UK and Avvocato Francesco Pinto, Italy
  • 2012: Willem J.H. Willems, Dean of the Faculty of Archaeology, University of Leiden, Netherlands
  • 2013: M. Daniel Thérond, former Head of Department of the Culture, Heritage and Diversity Department, Council of Europe, and Vincent Gaffney
  • 2014: Marie Louise Stig Sørensen and Erzsébet Jerem
  • 2015: María Ángeles Querol Fernández and Martin Oswald Hugh Carver
  • 2016: Unité d'Archéologie de la Ville de Saint-Denis and Caroline Sturdy Colls
  • 2017: Unità di Crisi e di Coordinamento Regionale Marche del Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali e del turismo
  • 2018: Ivan Pavlů and Francisco Javier Sánchez-Palencia Ramos
  • 2019: Osman Kavala and Fundación Catedral Santa María, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Basque country, Spain
  • 2020: Gilly Carr and REMAINS of Greenland program and network; honorary mention to SARAT (Safeguarding Archaeological Assets of Turkey) Project and SPLASHCOS (Submerged Prehistoric Archaeology and Landscapes of the Continental Shelf)
  • 2021: Laurajane Smith, Citizens Committee of Ierapetra and SITAR – Sistema Informativo Territoriale Archeologico di Roma / Geographic Archaeological Information System of Rome; honorary mention to West Dunbartonshire Council
  • 2022: Sophia Labadi and AVASA/IIMAS - Engaging youngsters in cultural heritage: Urkesh One-on One program
  • 2023: Fedir Androshchuk and Sociedad de Ciencias Aranzadi, honorary mention to Arturo Ruiz Rodríguez and the International Organising Team of the First Kings of Europe exhibition

Student Award edit

A student award was instituted in 2002 and is awarded annually for the best paper presented at the EAA Annual Meeting by a student or an archaeologist working on a dissertation.[12]

  • 2002 - Laura M. Popova
  • 2003 - Anita Synnestvedt
  • 2004 - Jonathan D. Le Huray
  • 2005 - Marta Caroscio
  • 2006 - NOT AWARDED
  • 2007 - Goce Naumov
  • 2008 - NOT AWARDED
  • 2009 - Pamela Cross
  • 2010 - Camilla Norman
  • 2011 - Heide Wrobel Norgaard
  • 2012 - Maria Leena Lahtinen
  • 2013 - Oliver Dietrich
  • 2014 - Can Aksoy and Ziyacan Bayar
  • 2015 - Patrycja Kupiec, and special commendation to Christine Cave and Alex Davies
  • 2016 - Sian Mui and Shumon Hussain
  • 2017 - Emma Brownlee and Yftinus van Popta
  • 2018 - Hanna Kivikero
  • 2019 - Annabell Zander
  • 2020 - Samantha Leggett, and honorary mention to Tomas Janek
  • 2021 - Karen O'Toole
  • 2022 - Paloma Cuello del Pozo
  • 2023 - Mathilde Vestergaard Meyer

EAA Book Prize edit

The EAA annually awards the EAA Book Prize.[13]

EAA Book Prize winning publications:

  • 2023
    • The Routledge Handbook of Archaeothanatology: Bioarchaeology of Mortuary Behaviour, Edited by Christopher Knüsel and Eline Schotsmans, Routledge 2022
    • April Nowell: Growing Up in the Ice Age: Fossil and archaeological evidence of the lived lives of Plio-Pleistocene children, Oxbow Books 2021

Annual Meetings edit

The EAA inaugural meeting took place in Ljubljana, Slovenia in September 1994. The official first Annual Meeting took place in September 1995 in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, and an Annual Meeting has taken place every year since. The table below shows the Meeting locations and dates.[14]

Ljubljana, Slovenia September 22–25, 1994
1st Santiago de Compostela September 20–25, 1995
2nd Riga, Latvia September 25–29, 1996
3rd Ravenna, Italy September 24–28, 1997
4th Göteborg, Sweden September 23–27, 1998
5th Bournemouth, UK September 14–19, 1999
6th Lisbon, Portugal September 12–17, 2000
7th Esslingen, Germany September 19–23, 2001
8th Thessaloniki, Greece September 24–28, 2002
9th St. Petersburg, Russia September 10–14, 2003
10th Lyon, France September 5–12, 2004
11th Cork, Ireland September 5–11, 2005
12th Cracow, Poland September 19–24, 2005
13th Zadar, Croatia September 18–23, 2007
14th La Valletta, Malta September 16–21, 2008
15th Riva del Garda, Italy September 15–20, 2009
16th The Hague, Netherlands September 1–5, 2010
17th Oslo, Norway September 14–18, 2011
18th Helsinki, Finland August 30–September 1, 2012
19th Pilsen, Czech Republic September 4–8, 2013
20th Istanbul, Turkey September 10–14, 2014
21st Glasgow, Scotland September 2–5, 2015
22nd Vilnius, Lithuania August 31–September 4, 2016
23rd Maastricht, Netherlands August 30–September 3, 2017
24th Barcelona, Spain September 5–8, 2018
25th Bern, Switzerland September 4–8, 2019
26th Virtual, online August 26–30, 2020
27th Kiel, Germany September 8–11, 2021
28th Budapest, Hungary August 31–September 3, 2022
29th Belfast, Northern Ireland August 30–September 2, 2023
*30th Rome, Italy August 26–31, 2024
*31st Belgrade, Serbia August–September, 2025
*32nd Athens, Greece August–September, 2026

* Those marked with an asterisk are upcoming

Publications edit

The EAA publishes the quarterly European Journal of Archaeology (EJA),[15] originally the Journal of European Archaeology (1993–1997), the monograph series THEMES In Contemporary Archaeology,[16] Elements: The Archaeology of Europe series and an electronic newsletter, The European Archaeologist (TEA).[17] EJA is currently co-edited by Catherine J. Frieman and Zena Kamash.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Cleere, H. 1995. The EAA is up and running. The European Archaeologist 3: 1-3.; EAA Statutes
  2. ^ Council of Europe Conference of INGOs http://coe-ngo.org/#/ingo/
  3. ^ "EAA Statutes". www.e-a-a.org. Retrieved 2016-12-06.
  4. ^ "EAA Code of Practice". www.e-a-a.org. Retrieved 2016-12-06.
  5. ^ "EAA Code of Practice for Fieldwork Training". www.e-a-a.org. Retrieved 2016-12-06.
  6. ^ EAA Affiliate Organizations
  7. ^ Recognition of EAA by the Council of Europe; CoE list of INGOs
  8. ^ EAA Statutes Article VI: Organization
  9. ^ "About EAA". European Association of Archaeologists. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  10. ^ EAA Prizes and Awards
  11. ^ EAA European Archaeological Heritage Prize
  12. ^ EAA Student Award
  13. ^ [1]
  14. ^ EAA Conferences
  15. ^ EJA at Cambridge University Press
  16. ^ Routledge (Taylor & Francis Group) "Themes in Contemporary Archaeology; EAA THEMES homepage
  17. ^ TEA homepage

External links edit

  • Official website
  • European Journal of Archaeology
  • The European Archaeologist(TEA) Newsletter of the EAA

european, association, archaeologists, membership, based, profit, association, open, archaeologists, other, related, interested, individuals, bodies, europe, beyond, founded, 1994, inaugural, meeting, ljubljana, slovenia, where, statutes, were, formally, appro. The European Association of Archaeologists EAA is a membership based not for profit association open to archaeologists and other related or interested individuals or bodies in Europe and beyond It was founded in 1994 at an inaugural meeting in Ljubljana Slovenia where its Statutes were formally approved 1 and recognized by the Council of Europe in 1999 2 EAA has had over 15 000 members on its database from 75 countries EAA holds an annual conference Annual Meetings and publishes the flagship journal the European Journal of Archaeology The EAA also publishes an in house newsletter The European Archaeologist TEA and two monograph series Themes in Contemporary Archaeology and Elements The Archaeology of Europe The registered office of the association is in Prague Czech Republic European Association of ArchaeologistsLocation within Czech RepublicShow map of Czech RepublicEuropean Association of Archaeologists Europe Show map of EuropeAbbreviationEAAFormation1994TypeNonprofitHeadquartersPrague Czech RepublicCoordinates50 05 15 N 14 25 17 E 50 08750 N 14 42139 E 50 08750 14 42139Region servedEuropeFieldsArchaeology Cultural heritage managementMembership 2023 3 973Official languageEnPresidentEszter BanffyWebsitehttps www e a a org Contents 1 Mission 2 Governance 3 Awards 3 1 European Archaeological Heritage Prize 3 2 Student Award 3 3 EAA Book Prize 4 Annual Meetings 5 Publications 6 References 7 External linksMission editThe EAA offers Statutes 3 Code of practice and Principles 4 and code of practice for fieldwork training 5 The EAA further promotes international cooperation though interactions with Affiliate Organizations 6 In 1999 the EAA was granted consultative status with the Council of Europe which in 2003 was upgraded to participatory status 7 Governance editThe EAA is governed by an Executive Board elected by full Members of the Association The Executive Board comprises three or four officers president incoming president treasurer and secretary and six ordinary members 8 The current president is Eszter Banffy and former presidents include 9 Kristian Kristiansen 1994 1998 Willem Willems 1998 2003 Anthony Harding 2003 2009 Friedrich Luth 2009 2014 Marc Lodewijckx acting president 2014 2015 Felipe Criado Boado 2015 2021 Eszter Banffy 2021 2027 Awards editThe EAA awards prizes and honours relevant to its aims These include the European Archaeological Heritage Prize the EAA Student Award the EAA Book Prize and Honorary membership in the EAA 10 European Archaeological Heritage Prize edit The EAA instituted the European Archaeological Heritage Prize in 1999 An independent committee awards the prize annually to an outstanding individual institution local or regional government or a European or international officer or body 11 1999 M M Carrilho Minister of Culture from Portugal 2000 Margareta Biornstad former state antiquarian Sweden 2001 Otto Braasch member of the Aerial Archaeological Group AARG Germany 2002 Henry Cleere ICOMOS Paris 2003 Viktor Trifonov Institute of Material Culture Russian Academy of Sciences in Sankt Petersburg 2004 Illicit Antiquities Research Centre at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge 2005 Kristian Kristiansen Sweden 2006 John Coles UK 2007 Siegmar von Schnurbein Germany 2008 Jean Paul Demoule France 2009 Ulrich Ruoff Switzerland 2010 David John Breeze Scotland 2011 Girolamo Ferdinando UK and Avvocato Francesco Pinto Italy 2012 Willem J H Willems Dean of the Faculty of Archaeology University of Leiden Netherlands 2013 M Daniel Therond former Head of Department of the Culture Heritage and Diversity Department Council of Europe and Vincent Gaffney 2014 Marie Louise Stig Sorensen and Erzsebet Jerem 2015 Maria Angeles Querol Fernandez and Martin Oswald Hugh Carver 2016 Unite d Archeologie de la Ville de Saint Denis and Caroline Sturdy Colls 2017 Unita di Crisi e di Coordinamento Regionale Marche del Ministero dei beni e delle attivita culturali e del turismo 2018 Ivan Pavlu and Francisco Javier Sanchez Palencia Ramos 2019 Osman Kavala and Fundacion Catedral Santa Maria Vitoria Gasteiz Basque country Spain 2020 Gilly Carr and REMAINS of Greenland program and network honorary mention to SARAT Safeguarding Archaeological Assets of Turkey Project and SPLASHCOS Submerged Prehistoric Archaeology and Landscapes of the Continental Shelf 2021 Laurajane Smith Citizens Committee of Ierapetra and SITAR Sistema Informativo Territoriale Archeologico di Roma Geographic Archaeological Information System of Rome honorary mention to West Dunbartonshire Council 2022 Sophia Labadi and AVASA IIMAS Engaging youngsters in cultural heritage Urkesh One on One program 2023 Fedir Androshchuk and Sociedad de Ciencias Aranzadi honorary mention to Arturo Ruiz Rodriguez and the International Organising Team of the First Kings of Europe exhibitionStudent Award edit A student award was instituted in 2002 and is awarded annually for the best paper presented at the EAA Annual Meeting by a student or an archaeologist working on a dissertation 12 2002 Laura M Popova 2003 Anita Synnestvedt 2004 Jonathan D Le Huray 2005 Marta Caroscio 2006 NOT AWARDED 2007 Goce Naumov 2008 NOT AWARDED 2009 Pamela Cross 2010 Camilla Norman 2011 Heide Wrobel Norgaard 2012 Maria Leena Lahtinen 2013 Oliver Dietrich 2014 Can Aksoy and Ziyacan Bayar 2015 Patrycja Kupiec and special commendation to Christine Cave and Alex Davies 2016 Sian Mui and Shumon Hussain 2017 Emma Brownlee and Yftinus van Popta 2018 Hanna Kivikero 2019 Annabell Zander 2020 Samantha Leggett and honorary mention to Tomas Janek 2021 Karen O Toole 2022 Paloma Cuello del Pozo 2023 Mathilde Vestergaard MeyerEAA Book Prize edit The EAA annually awards the EAA Book Prize 13 EAA Book Prize winning publications 2023 The Routledge Handbook of Archaeothanatology Bioarchaeology of Mortuary Behaviour Edited by Christopher Knusel and Eline Schotsmans Routledge 2022 April Nowell Growing Up in the Ice Age Fossil and archaeological evidence of the lived lives of Plio Pleistocene children Oxbow Books 2021Annual Meetings editThe EAA inaugural meeting took place in Ljubljana Slovenia in September 1994 The official first Annual Meeting took place in September 1995 in Santiago de Compostela Spain and an Annual Meeting has taken place every year since The table below shows the Meeting locations and dates 14 Ljubljana Slovenia September 22 25 19941st Santiago de Compostela September 20 25 19952nd Riga Latvia September 25 29 19963rd Ravenna Italy September 24 28 19974th Goteborg Sweden September 23 27 19985th Bournemouth UK September 14 19 19996th Lisbon Portugal September 12 17 20007th Esslingen Germany September 19 23 20018th Thessaloniki Greece September 24 28 20029th St Petersburg Russia September 10 14 200310th Lyon France September 5 12 200411th Cork Ireland September 5 11 200512th Cracow Poland September 19 24 200513th Zadar Croatia September 18 23 200714th La Valletta Malta September 16 21 200815th Riva del Garda Italy September 15 20 200916th The Hague Netherlands September 1 5 201017th Oslo Norway September 14 18 201118th Helsinki Finland August 30 September 1 201219th Pilsen Czech Republic September 4 8 201320th Istanbul Turkey September 10 14 201421st Glasgow Scotland September 2 5 201522nd Vilnius Lithuania August 31 September 4 201623rd Maastricht Netherlands August 30 September 3 201724th Barcelona Spain September 5 8 201825th Bern Switzerland September 4 8 201926th Virtual online August 26 30 202027th Kiel Germany September 8 11 202128th Budapest Hungary August 31 September 3 202229th Belfast Northern Ireland August 30 September 2 2023 30th Rome Italy August 26 31 2024 31st Belgrade Serbia August September 2025 32nd Athens Greece August September 2026 Those marked with an asterisk are upcomingPublications editThe EAA publishes the quarterly European Journal of Archaeology EJA 15 originally the Journal of European Archaeology 1993 1997 the monograph series THEMES In Contemporary Archaeology 16 Elements The Archaeology of Europe series and an electronic newsletter The European Archaeologist TEA 17 EJA is currently co edited by Catherine J Frieman and Zena Kamash 2 References edit Cleere H 1995 The EAA is up and running The European Archaeologist 3 1 3 EAA Statutes Council of Europe Conference of INGOs http coe ngo org ingo EAA Statutes www e a a org Retrieved 2016 12 06 EAA Code of Practice www e a a org Retrieved 2016 12 06 EAA Code of Practice for Fieldwork Training www e a a org Retrieved 2016 12 06 EAA Affiliate Organizations Recognition of EAA by the Council of Europe CoE list of INGOs EAA Statutes Article VI Organization About EAA European Association of Archaeologists Retrieved 2022 06 27 EAA Prizes and Awards EAA European Archaeological Heritage Prize EAA Student Award 1 EAA Conferences EJA at Cambridge University Press Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group Themes in Contemporary Archaeology EAA THEMES homepage TEA homepageExternal links editOfficial website European Journal of Archaeology The European Archaeologist TEA Newsletter of the EAA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European Association of Archaeologists amp oldid 1201770813 European Archaeological Heritage Prize, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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