Letty ten Harkel
Assistant professor
- Name
- Dr. A.T. ten Harkel
- Telephone
- +31 71 527 2631
- a.t.ten.harkel@arch.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0003-1437-3038
Letty ten Harkel is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Global Archaeology.
More information about Letty ten Harkel
News
Leiden Archaeology Blog
Office days
To be determined
Research
Letty ten Harkel's interdisciplinary research focuses on the formation and negotiation of identities in the North Sea and Mediterranean regions, forging links between archaeology, heritage management, history, literature and archaeological science. Prior to joining the Leiden team, she worked as a Postdoctoral Researcher on two successive projects for the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford.
The first of these was the English Landscapes and Identities (EngLaId) project, which ran from 2011-2016 and investigated long-term patterns of landscape use in England from c. 1500 BCE to c. 1100 CE. Letty was the early medieval specialist on the project, working closely with colleagues focusing on the Roman and later prehistoric periods.
The second (ongoing) project is the Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa (EAMENA) project, a collaboration between the UK universities of Oxford, Leicester and Durham, which promotes the protection of archaeology and heritage in the MENA region. In this context, Letty took a leading role in a number of field projects in Lebanon as well as remote sensing work in South Sinai.
In addition to this, Letty has actively pursued a research agenda investigating early medieval identities in the wider North Sea region through her Fell grant-funded Medieval Migrants of the North Sea World (MMNSW) project and its precursor, the Investigating the Dead in Early Medieval Domburg project. A common thread through Letty’s varied research portfolio is a deep interest in how people in the past related to each other, and how we, as archaeologists, relate to the past.
Teaching activities
Letty’s teaching activities are as wide-ranging as her research background. In addition to providing specialist classes during her PhD and Postdoctoral appointments at Sheffield and Oxford, she has held part-time / affiliate lectureships at Canterbury Christ Church, Reading, and Birkbeck, and has taught extensively in the Oxford University Department for Continuing Education. She has also redesigned the entire archaeology curriculum for (and taught aspects of) the Middlebury College – CMRS Oxford Humanities Study Abroad Program. During her employment as Postdoctoral Researcher on the EAMENA project, Letty was actively involved in the delivery of training programmes to heritage professionals in Egypt, Jordan, Libya and Tunisia, and to academics from Iran (the latter taught in the UK). Letty’s approach is student-focused and practical, aiming to equip students with the necessary tools to tackle complex issues independently.
Curriculum vitae
1996 - 1997 ‘Propedeuse’ English Language and Literature, University of Utrecht
1997 - 2002 ‘Doctoraal’ Mediëvistiek (Medieval Studies), with specialisation in Early Medieval History and Old English, University of Utrecht
2000-2001 Visiting Student in Dept of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic / Newnham College, University of Cambridge
2002 - 2003 MA in Medieval Archaeology, University of York
2003 - 2006 Field Archaeologist / Archaeological Supervisor, Cambridge Archaeological Unit, University of Cambridge
2006 - 2010 PhD in Archaeology, University of Sheffield
2008 British Council Research Fellow, John W. Kluge Center, Library of Congress, Washington DC
2010 - 2011 Field Archaeologist, various archaeological contractors in London
2011 - 2022 Postdoctoral Researcher, School of Archaeology, University of Oxford
Assistant professor
- Faculteit Archeologie
- World Archaeology
- Classical and Mediterranean Archaeology
- Harkel L. ten (2023), Between material reality and literary topos : ‘Towns’ in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. In: Levelt S. & Dunphy G. (Eds.), The Medieval Chronicle. The Medieval Chronicle no. 15. Leiden: Brill. 305–318.
- Harkel A.T. ten, Dierendonck R. van, Farber E., Dee M., Doeve P., Hamerow H., Jansma E., Le Roux P., Panhuysen R. & Deckers P. (2023), The human remains from early medieval Domburg (Netherlands) and other coastal communities in international perspective: towards an international research agenda for the cemeteries of the North Sea Emporia, Medieval Archaeology 67(1): 29-72.
- Tews S., Harkel A.T. ten & Shams A. (2022), From the coast to the High Mountains: a remote sensing survey of disturbances and threats to the archaeology and heritage of South Sinai, Journal of Maritime Archaeology 17(3): 375-399.
- Harkel A.T. ten, Fradley M., Flohr P., Vadafari A. & Neogi S. (2022), Documenting heritage in the 21st century: the EAMENA project and its potential for ‘big data’ research in Levantine archaeology, Levant 53(3): 265-281.
- Harkel A.T. ten (14 October 2022), Early medieval England in long-term perspective: the English Landscapes and Identities project. Leidenmedievalistsblog. Leiden: Leiden University. [blog entry].