Type | Academic department |
---|---|
Established | 1976 |
Affiliation | University of Sheffield |
Head of Department | Caroline Jackson |
Location | , , England 53°22′49″N 1°28′50″W / 53.3804°N 1.4806°W |
Website | www |
The Department of Archaeology at the University of Sheffield, UK, is an academic department providing undergraduate and postgraduate courses in archaeology and its sub-disciplines based in the city of Sheffield, South Yorkshire. It conducts archaeological associated research with several dedicated research centres. It was founded in 1976, stemming from early archaeology programs in the 1960s as one of the first universities in the UK with a dedicated Department of Archaeology.[1]
The department's current research specialisms include Prehistoric Europe, Classical Antiquity, Medieval Archaeology and Post-Medieval Britain, as well as landscape archaeology, funerary archaeology, material culture studies, zooarchaeology, osteology, bioarchaeology, and the archaeology of the Mediterranean.[1] From its inception in the 1960s, Sheffield developed a worldwide reputation for leading the science-based revolution in archaeology and theoretical turns in archaeological interpretation.
As of May 2021, the department is under threat of closure or merging into other departments.[2][3][4] The department would close at the end of the 2023/24 academic year.[5]
Research and study of archaeology at Sheffield developed over several decades. The first degree given for an archaeological subject at the University of Sheffield was to Percy Heathcote in 1930 as an MA for studying the burial mounds and stone circles on Stanton Moor and creating a small dedicated museum for the finds in Birchover.[6][7] In 1931 Arthur Woodward who had been Director of the British School at Athens was appointed to a lectureship in the Department of Ancient History at Sheffield.[8] Woodward had excavated at Sparta[9] and at Roman sites in Yorkshire including forts at Slack and Ilkley,[10] and the Roman villa at Rudston.[11] The appointment of Robert Hopper, a specialist on Greek coinage and the Acropolis, to the Department of Ancient History introduced the first explicit archaeological elements to the University's programs and establishment of the Department on the 7th Floor of the Arts Tower.[7] Hopper decided to concentrate on prehistory and appointed Warwick Bray in 1963 and Colin Renfrew in 1965 as lecturers to prepare the archaeology courses and set up a Single Honours degree in Prehistory and Archaeology with the first eight students graduating in 1970.[12][7] The course concentrated on theory and scientific methods in the context of British and European Prehistory.[8]
From the foundation in the 1960s, the Department and its programs were expanded and built upon. In 1967, the appointment of Jane Renfrew and Andrew Flemming as lecturers marked the first increase in dedicated research.[13] Paul Mellars and Patricia Phillips were appointed as research fellows in 1965 and 1970 respectively, and promoted lectureships in 1970 and 1972.[14][7] In conjunction with the further appointments of John Collis and Graeme Barker in 1972, and Robin Dennell in 1973[14] the research portfolio of the Department had broadened to include specialisms in theory, excavation, field survey, economics, and environmental archaeology.[7]
With the expansion of the department, Prehistory and Ancient History split into two separate departments when Robert Hopper retired in 1975. Keith Branigan was appointed in 1976,[15] founding the Department of Prehistory and Archaeology officially in September 1976,[7] and introducing the teaching and research of Aegean Prehistory and Archaeology[16] and Roman Archaeology. The Department at Sheffield then expanded further by introducing elements of Industrial Archaeology taught by David Crossley from the Sheffield Department of Economic and Social History, and appointing Richard Hodges to teach Medieval Archaeology. The appointment of Robin Torrence to teach anthropology, theory, and statistics (who had studied under Lewis Binford and Colin Refrew) in line with the department's expansion marked an increasing diversification and seminal interdisciplinary perspective on archaeological research.[7]
Further growth in 1976 due to the creation of the SERC Science-based Archaeology Committee through the UK Research Councils allowed for Sheffield to capitalise on an interdisciplinary approach to archaeology. By 1977, the department had ten staff and was one of the largest archaeology departments in Britain.[17] Dave Gilbertson joined the department as a physical geographer during this period to teach Environmental Archaeology and initiated the move of the department to its dedicated laboratory building at 3 Clarkehouse Road, opened by Magnus Magnusson in 1979.[7]
Sheffield became a major centre in changing archaeological practice. The expansion of radiocarbon dating and dendrochronology research in the 1970s at Sheffield, with Colin Refrew widening the application of radiocarbon dating in researching the origins of copper metallurgy and megalithic tombs in Europe, and the establishment of the Sheffield dendrochronology laboratory led by Ruth Morgan, Jennifer Hillam and Cathy Groves[18][7] marked seminal changes in chronological dating techniques and methods. New theoretical discussions on cultural change also prompted Renfrew (now at Southampton) and Andrew Flemming to organise a joint archaeological theory seminar in 1975, which became the annual Theoretical Archaeology Group meetings from 1979.[19]
The 1980s saw further widening of the department's specialisms in undergraduate and postgraduate teaching, specifically by hiring former pilot Derrick Riley to teach aerial photography, and Judson Chesterman the leading surgeon in Sheffield to demonstrate osteology.[7] The Department of Ancient History had continued after the split with Prehistory had appointed several classical archaeologists that also taught and researched in conjunction with the Department of Prehistory and Archaeology: John Cherry, Ian Sanders, David Kennedy, and John Lloyd all joined and led major archaeological projects. National cuts to universities in the UK through the 1980s however meant the closure of the Department of Ancient History in 1988 with some staff deciding to leave Sheffield and others merging into the Department of Prehistory and Archaeology.[7] In the 1980s, the Department changed its name to the Department of Archaeology and Prehistory, marking a change to its research emphasis. This change ushered in a strengthening of materials research in the Department of Archaeology and Prehistory during the 1990s with the appointment of Barbara Ottaway to teach metallurgy and later Caroline Jackson in glass. Further appointments through the 1980s and 1990s increased the specialities of the Department: Glynis Jones (palaeobotany),[20] Paul Halstead (zooarchaeology), Mark Edmonds (landscape and Neolithic archaeology), John Moreland (medieval archaeology), Mike Parker Pearson (prehistoric archaeology), Marek Zvelebil (prehistory and agriculture), Maureen Carroll (Roman archaeology), and Andrew Chamberlain (human osteology),[7] Kevin Edwards (palaeoenvironments),[21] and John Barrett (archaeological theory and British Bronze Age)[22] expanded the range of specialisms in the department.
The 1980s and 1990s also saw the inception of major archaeological projects; SEARCH (Sheffield Environmental and Archaeological Research Campaign in the Hebrides) which began in 1987 and lasting until 2003, and the Stonehenge Riverside Project were significant UK archaeology projects within this group.[23] Postgraduates at the department founded Assemblage, an online peer-reviewed journal for graduate students to share their work, in 1994 with the first issue published in 1996. Over time, the journal began to include articles from more established researchers and was one of the first online-only archaeology journals.[24][25] The 1990s also saw the expansion of the department to include commercial archaeological projects through the establishment of ARCUS (Archaeological Research and Consultancy at the University of Sheffield[26]). During this period, several research centres and groups were established that went on to grow into significant international institutions. In 1995, the Sheffield Centre for Aegean Archaeology (SCAA) was established by (now Professor) Keith Branigan which was further enhanced in 2004 by the appointment of John Bennet to Sheffield’s first Chair in Aegean Archaeology.[16] The Centre capitalised on the expanding material analysis and material culture studies research areas to develop petrographic analyses of Mediterranean ceramics, including the appointment of Peter Day to a lectureship in 1994.[27] The Sheffield Centre for Archaeobotany and ancient Land-usE (SCALE) was also established during this period by researchers including Glynis Jones.[28]
The early 2000s saw another change in name to the Department of Archaeology, reflecting prominent changes in how archaeology was being taught, researched and practised, especially in scientific methods and field survey. This included involvement in major UK infrastructure projects, such as John Barrett's work in Framework Archaeology during the expansion of Stanstead Airport and construction of Heathrow Terminal 5.[29][30] The department had also moved premises to Northgate House on West Street to house the expanding laboratories and collections.[31] Sub-disciplines were further built-upon with the appointment of Umberto Albarella in 2004 to grow the dedicated zooarchaeology lab[32] and Hugh Willmott to expand European Medieval archaeology research.[33] In 2005, Sue Sherratt and Andrew Sherratt took positions at Sheffield; Sue Sherratt held a permanent lectureship in East Mediterranean Archaeology and Andrew Sherratt was appointed to the Chair in Old World Prehistory where he remained until his death in 2006.[34]
Following the 2007-2009 global recession and financial crisis of 2007-2008, the department merged its commercial archaeology unit (ARCUS) with Wessex Archaeology to become the Wessex Archaeology northern branch in 2010.[26]
Major projects throughout the 2010s continued to develop the department's profile and international collaborations, in traditional archaeological research, development of new methodologies, and an increasing portfolio of commercial and community archaeology involvement, such as in the creation of Barnsley's first museum and archive. From 2011-2016, Hugh Willmott led excavations at Thornton Abbey in North Lincolnshire, during which the project uncovered the first instance in Britain of a Black Death mass grave found in a rural, rather than urban, area.[35][36] Through the Marie Sklodowska Curie Actions 7th Framework Program, Ellery Frahm's research in the New Archaeological Research Network for Integrating Approaches to Ancient Material Studies-NARNIA (fronted by Vasiliki Kassianidou at the University of Cyprus) expanded the application of portable x-ray fluorescence (pXRF) to source and survey obsidian in Armenia.[37] In 2017, building on the newly-housed zooarchaeological reference collection, Umberto Albarella and Lenny Salvagno pioneered new zooarchaeological identification methods for sheep and goat.[38][39] In 2018, the department discovered the remains of the Lodge Moor Prisoner of War Camp, largest prisoner of war camp in Britain in the Second World War.[40]
In 2017, the department moved to new bespoke laboratories in the recently closed Sheffield Bioincubator (and renamed Ella Armitage Building after the archaeologist).
On 21 May 2021, it was announced that the University of Sheffield was considering closing the department, to stop teaching archaeology, and making all the department's staff redundant.[2] The two other options considered were to further invest in the department, or to close the department but keep some teaching and research in archaeology within other departments of the university.[2][41] On 26 May, it was announced that the university's preferred way forwards was to close the department but merge some of its staff into other departments.[42] One of the department's lecturers, Hugh Willmott, stated that this would involve moving "only two small elements of our teaching into dispersed departments where they shall surely wither and quickly die".[3]
The threat of closure has received criticism.[43][44][45] A statement from the Council for British Archaeology described the proposed closure as "devastating" and went on to say that "at a time when commercial archaeology is desperate for new employees the loss of a department with Sheffield's reputation and track record is a short-sighted and retrograde step".[46] A former department academic, Mike Parker Pearson, stated: "Sheffield is one of the UK's leading departments of archaeology, known and respected throughout the world. I suspect the vice-chancellor has no idea of the international outrage that closing the department is going to cause."[43] A letter to The Times beginning "We are dismayed at the news that the University of Sheffield's renowned Department of Archaeology is under threat of closure" was signed by leading British archaeologists, including Amy Bogaard, Graeme Barker, Chris Gosden, Melanie Giles, Richard Hodges, and Colin Renfrew.[47] An anonymous donor offered the university £200,000 if the department was kept open.[48] The University Senate met on 23 June; a final decision was made on 12 July to close the department. By this point a petition to keep the department has gained more than 42,000 signatures.[48][49] The University and College Union subsequently "[entered] into dispute with University management".[50]
In December 2021, it was announced that the department would close at the end of the 2023/24 academic year. Remaining permanent academics would then move to either the history or biological sciences departments.[5]
Years | Project | Site | Faculty involved | External collaborators |
---|---|---|---|---|
1968-1970 | Sitagori excavations | Sitagroi, Greece | Colin Renfrew | |
1973-19xx | Dartmoor Bronze Age reaves excavations | Darmoor, UK | Andrew Flemming, John Collis | |
1978 | Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East (APAAME)[51] | Middle East | David Kennedy | |
1980–1990 | Roystone Grange Archaeological Trail [52] | Roystone Grange, UK | Richard Hodges | |
Survey of Molise and Excavation of the Monastery at San Vincenzo al Volturno | Molise, Italy | Graeme Barker, Richard Hodges | ||
Late Iron Age urbanisation in the Auvergne | Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France | John Collis | ||
1980–1989 | Montarrenti Archaeological Project | Montarrenti, Italy | Richard Hodges, Graeme Barker | |
1987–2003 | SEARCH (Sheffield Environmental and Archaeological Research Campaign in the Hebrides)[53][54] | The Hebridies, UK
South Uist, UK |
Keith Branigan, Paul Mellars, Mike Parker Pearson, Marek Zvelebil | |
1988-1999 | Early hominids in Pakistan | Pakistan | Robin Dennell | British Archaeological Mission to Pakistan |
1990-xxxx | Ancient Landscape Reconstruction in Bohemia (ALRB) | Czech Republic | Marek Zvelebil | |
1999–2009 | The Stansted Framework Project and Heathrow Terminal 5 Excavations [29][30] | Heathrow Terminal 5, UK
Stansted Airport, UK |
John Barrett | Oxford Archaeology, Wessex Archaeology, |
2003–2009 | Stonehenge Riverside Project | Stonehenge and Avebury, UK | Mike Parker-Pearson | |
2000-2019 | Vagnari Roman Imperial Estate Excavations | Vagnari, Italy | Maureen Carroll | McCaster University |
2000–2019 | ArchAtlas | - | Andrew Sherratt, Susan Sherratt, Deborah Harlan | |
2011-2016 | Thornton Abbey Project[35] | Thornton Abbey, UK | Hugh Willmott | |
2018- | Lodge Moor Prisoner of War Camp[40] | Redmires, UK | Sheffield Lakeland Landscape Partnership (SLLP) |
In the 2020 QS World University Rankings Sheffield's Department of Archaeology was ranked 29th globally amongst a list of 201 universities.[55] The same year, the National Student Survey found that the department has an overall satisfaction of 91% amongst students; the department was amongst the top 10 archaeology departments in the UK by this measure.[56]
Sir, We are dismayed at the news that the University of Sheffield's renowned Department of Archaeology is under threat of closure. This and similar concerns at the University of Chester raise the prospect of diminishing archaeology courses, despite the UK's leading position in the discipline and a national shortage of archaeologists. We are former staff or students at Sheffield's department and would draw attention to the innovation of its research and teaching, combined with a highly successful agenda of widening access into the discipline. Archaeology has an unusual status in that it bridges the sciences and social sciences. Sheffield staff have embraced these opportunities and as a result its graduates have made a broad impact, populating faculties worldwide. We urge the university to champion the department at this crucial juncture. This is a key chance to enhance access to the subject at a time when the value of heritage has never been more apparent.