1936 in archaeology
The year 1936 in archaeology involved some significant events.
Table of years in archaeology |
---|
Related time period or subjects |
Art Archaeology Architecture Literature Music Science more In Template:Year nav topic: extra parameters: science |
Excavations
- Dmanisi, Georgia.
- Julliberrie's Grave by Ronald Jessup.
- Spiro Mounds by University of Oklahoma.
- Fort Hawkins, Georgia, by Gordon Willey.
- Govurqala, Azerbaijan.
- Al Mina, Syria, by Leonard Woolley.
- Excavation and identification of necropolis at Beit She'arim.
- Excavations at Mersin by John Garstang begin (continue to 1939).
- New excavations at Viroconium (Wroxeter) in England begin (continue to 1937).
Finds
- October - The Mästermyr chest is accidentally discovered on the island of Gotland, Sweden.
- November - Gebang Hindu temple at Yogyakarta on Java is discovered.
- Baghdad Battery discovered in Iraq.
- The Emesa helmet is found by looters near Homs in Syria.
- First undisturbed artefacts of Clovis culture found in New Mexico.
- The Statue of Iddi-Ilum is unearthed in Mari, Syria.
Publications
- 6 July - Publication of Agatha Christie's novel Murder in Mesopotamia.
- First report on excavations of Iron Age settlement of Biskupin.
- V. Gordon Childe - Man Makes Himself.
- W. F. Grimes - The Megalithic Monuments of Wales.
Births
- 4 April - Barri Jones, Welsh Classical archaeologist (d. 1999)[1]
- 12 July - John Wilkes, English Classical archaeologist
Deaths
- Luigi Maria Ugolini, Italian archaeologist (b. 1895)[2]
References
- Birley, Anthony (22 July 1999). "Barri Jones". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 April 2017.
- "Ugolini, Luigi M. (Luigi Maria) 1895-1936". worldcat.org. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.