Professor of Archaeology
<h3>Etruscan archaeology</h3><h4>Poggio Colla excavations and artefact studies</h4><p>I am currently Hugh Last Fellow at the<a href="http://www.bsr.ac.uk/" rel="nofollow">British School at Rome</a>2016-17, pursuing research into Etruscan archaeology in northern Etruria in the first half of the first Millennium BCE. Specifically, I am challenging the current consensus that the Apennine mountains form a barrier at the northern frontier of Etruria. This consensus has been undermined by recent fieldwork in the under-explored area between Florence and Bologna. Now it is possible to reassess the cultural, social, economic and historical development of northern Etruria and its relationship to the Po Valley, north of the Apennines. This project developed from my involvement in excavations at Poggio Colla, to the north west of Florence, in collaboration Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, The University of Texas at Austin and Franklin and Marshall College as a part of the<a href="http://www.poggiocolla.org/" rel="nofollow">Mugello Valley Archaeological Project</a>.</p><p>Within the broader project exploring the hilltop sactuary and settlement at Poggio Colla I am focusing on the north west hill slope where deposits dating to the Orientalizing Period (about 675-575 BCE) have been investigated. Here we have found rare evidence for economic activity in this early part of the Etruscan period, relating to textile spinning and pottery manufacture. In 2009 we excavated three‘fire-pits’, probably pottery kilns, and part of a stone quarry, possibly used for the construction of the first temple on the hill top in the mid sixth century. In 2010 we explored these industrial installations further. Details are available online: <a href="http://www.poggiocolla.org/08_nw2and3.html" rel="nofollow">Poggio Colla 2008 North West Slope project</a> and <a href="http://www.poggiocolla.org/09_nw4_nw5.html" rel="nofollow">Final Report</a>. In 2012 a small area was investigated to resolve outstanding stratigraphic questions revealing two further partly-quarried sandstone blocks chiselled from the solid bedrock and roughly shaped, leaving abundant tool marks. A note worthy find was a single sherd of finger-nail impressed Neolithic ceramic of a type known from elsewhere in the lower valley of the Sieve, but this is the first find of Neolithic ceramic from Poggio Colla. </p><p><img alt="Stamped bucchero bowl" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/200stamped_bucchero.jpg" style="height:79px; width:200px" /> <img alt="Quarried stone" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/quarry.JPG" style="height:164px; width:200px" /></p><p>Stamped bucchero bowl and quarried stone.</p><p>The aim of the 2013 season was to explore some outcrops of rock, identified in 2012 that showed signs of being worked and to establish the limits of the Etruscan occupation on the hill slope by trial trenching and geophysical survey (magnetometry and ground penetrating radar).Ten trenches were excavated across an area of hill slope c.150 x 50m to assess and sample the archaeological remains.One trench revealed a large rectangular cut in the bedrock with two sequences of steps in the North West corner running down from the present ground level. Tool marks on the cut bedrock were compared with those found in the large Early Modern stone quarry on the South Western side of Poggio Colla and found to be similar, leading to the conclusion that this quarrying activity dates to the 19<sup>th</sup>century. Nevertheless, undisturbed layers to the West of the cut into the bedrock did preserve an Etruscan occupation layer that yielded late Orientalizing to Early Archaic material similar to that founding earlier seasons. Further test trenches to the west revealed the remains of two dry stone walls and Orientalising and mid-Bronze Age ceramics.</p><p>In 2014 excavations on the hilltop exploreed rock-cut features interpreted as post holes, forming part of a wooden structure, perhaps an elliptical hut with a large central post hole and further smaller holes forming an arc– probably the wall of a hut. These is the earliest evidence for structures on the hill top and suggests that a settlement of timber buildings preceded the later temple. In 2015 a final season of excvation revovered one of the <a href="http://blog.smu.edu/research/2016/08/24/one-of-the-most-significant-etruscan-discoveries-in-decades-names-female-goddess-uni/" rel="nofollow">longest known Etruscan inscriptions on stone</a>that derives from this first phase of timber structures. Specialist study of the inscription is underway, and it appears to mention the two most important Etruscan deities Tinia and Uni, the equivalents of Roman Jupiter and Juno. Finds from the excavation and a hologram of the inscription went on display in Florence for the Autumn of 2016.</p><p><img alt="View of exhibition" src="/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/Mostra_ROM2438.jpg" style="height:213px; width:320px" /></p><p>View of the exhibition in the Pinacoteca Regionale Palazzo Panciatichi, Florence.</p><p><img alt="Hologram of the inscription" src="/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/Hologram_ROM2419.jpg" style="height:213px; width:320px" /></p><p>Hologram of the Etruscan inscription.</p><h4>Etruscan DNA</h4><p>In February 2007 there was a flurry of media reports that DNA had been used to prove that the Etruscans originated in Anatolia in modern Turkey. This went against the current archaeological consensus that claims them as an indigenous people in Italy. I decided to investigate…</p><p>After an extensive search in new interdisciplinary territory I concluded that the media reports were not quite right and that, as usual, the truth was far more complicated and interesting. You can find out my conclusions at <a href="http://www.classicsconfidential.co.uk/Classics_Confidential/The_Interviews/Entries/2010/3/8_Etruscan_DNA.html" rel="nofollow">Classics Confidential</a> or YouTube (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEt1b0Zazfo" rel="nofollow">part 1</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mSYa0NZI2rw&feature=related" rel="nofollow">part 2</a>). Part of this research has been published in a<a href="http://www.britishmuseum.org/pdf/14%20Perkins-pp.pdf" rel="nofollow">paper written</a>in honour of Sybille Haynes.</p><p>Perkins, P. (2009)‘<a href="http://www.britishmuseum.org/pdf/14%20Perkins-pp.pdf" rel="nofollow">DNA and Etruscan identity</a>’ in Perkins, P. and Swaddling, J. (eds.) <em>Etruscan by Definition</em>, British Museum Press, pp.95-111, ISBN-13: 978-0-86159-173-2.</p><h4>Bucchero</h4><p><a href="http://www.britishmuseumshoponline.org/invt/cmc0861591657" rel="nofollow"><img alt="Etruscan Bucchero in the British Museum" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/150buccbook.jpg" style="float:right; height:209px; margin-left:6px; margin-right:6px; width:150px" /></a>In 2007 I published the results of five years of research into Etruscan Bucchero ceramics in the British Museum. The book provides a history of the study of bucchero and the formation of the Museum's collection. The largest part contains detailed discussion of over 300 ceramic objects, that are contextualized within the past 75 years of scholarship and study of bucchero. All the objects are illustrated. Some of this research was supported Arts and Humanities Research Board, and the book presents a complete catalogue of this distinctive type of pottery in the Greek and Roman Department of the British Museum.</p><p>Perkins, P. (2007) <em>Etruscan Bucchero in the British Museum</em> The British Museum Press, London136pp, ISBN 978 0 86159 165 7</p><p>You can download it from the<a href="http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/publications/research_publications_series/2007/etruscan_bucchero_ware.aspx" rel="nofollow">British Museum's website</a>.</p><p>Whilst working at the British Museum I co-organized with Dr. J. Swaddling the <em>Etruscans Now Conference</em>, a major international conference held at the British Museum in December 2002, and attended by 143 scholars from 13 countries. The conference was supported by The British Academy and the British Museum Friends. Abstracts and draft papers from the international conference are still available on the conference website<a href="http://www.open.ac.uk/Arts/classtud/etruscans-now/index.html"><u>Etruscans Now</u></a>. Selected papers have been published in volumes 9 and 10 of <a href="http://www.etruscanfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/ETRUSCAN-STUDIES-Volumes-1-19.1-Table-of-Contents.pdf" rel="nofollow">Etruscan Studies</a>. A summary of the conference has been published in the periodical Minerva. (Perkins, P. (2003)‘The inner life of the Etruscans’, <em>Minerva</em>, Vol.14 No.5, 42-3).</p><p> </p><p><img alt="Etruscan bucchero amphora" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/amphora.jpg" style="height:141px; width:142px" /><br />Etruscan bucchero amphora</p><h4>Field Survey, Excavation and Artefact studies in the Albegna Valley - Ager Cosanus, Tuscany, Italy</h4><p>Since the early 1980’s I have been involved in archaeological field work in the Albegna Valley in southern Tuscany. This collaborative work with colleagues from Pisa, Siena and elsewhere in the UK and Italy has involved extensive multi-period field survey, excavation and artefact analysis. I have been working with the data relating to the Etruscan period, particularly the ceramic finds and the settlement pattern. Publication of field survey data collected during the 1980’s has involved analysis of Etruscan sites, settlement and burial patterns using GIS to study settlement location and state organization of territory; reconstruction of population change in the region through the first Millennium BC; <a href="http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue4/perkins_index.html" rel="nofollow">analysis of Etruscan artefact distributions</a>; and reconstruction of the Etruscan economy.</p><p><img alt="Predictive modelling of the Etruscan settlement pattern in the Albegna Valley" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/settlement.jpg" style="height:214px; width:244px" /><br />Predictive modelling of the Etruscan settlement pattern in the Albegna Valley</p><p>Part of this involves modelling the archaeology of Etruscan communities by analysis of field survey and topographic data with Geographical Information Systems (GIS). </p><p>In 1986-6 I direction the first ever excavation of an Etruscan farm site at Podere Tartuchino. The site was discovered by survey as a surface scatter and excavated in order to investigate the sub-surface remains, provide evidence for the economy of small rural sites and to recover stratified ceramic assemblages to date surface scatters. The excavation revealed two phases of building and uncovered the earliest wine-press yet found in Italy. The project was funded by The British School at Rome, the British Academy and other Italian public sources. The award of an Ellaina Macnamara Memorial Scholarship for Etruscan Archaeology enabled the publication of the excavation. The farm remains the only Etruscan farm to be both excavated and fully<a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/40311146" rel="nofollow">published</a>.</p><p><img alt="Podere Tartuchino phase" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/podere-tartuchino.jpg" style="height:156px; width:192px" /><br />Podere Tartuchino phase 1</p><h4>Excavation and publication of the Villa Pigneto Sacchetti, Rome</h4><p>In 1992 I co-directed a pioneering post-medieval excavation of the Villa Pigneto Sacchetti, a 17th century AD baroque villa in Rome in a project with Canterbury School of Architecture and the University of Rome, funded by the British School at Rome and the Carnegie Trust. The Villa Pigneto Sacchetti, built by the painter and architect Pietro da Cortona, was believed lost, but field survey re-located the building and excavation recovered a partial ground plan, enabling a comparison of the physical remains with the surviving eighteenth century architectural drawings and seventeenth century documents. Results were published in the<a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/40311032" rel="nofollow">Papers of The British School at Rome</a>.</p><p>Subsequently, we revisited the interpretation of the development of the villa in the light of new art historical research on the its decoration, proposing a more complex, phased, building history than previously, once again in the<a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/25754016" rel="nofollow">Papers of The British School at Rome</a>.<br /><img alt="Nymphaeum, Villa Pigneto Sacchetti" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/VPS92C075.jpg" style="height:149px; width:225px" /><br /><img alt=" Nymphaeum, Villa Pigneto Sacchetti" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/2300nymphaeum.jpg" style="height:296px; width:400px" /><br />Nymphaeum, Villa Pigneto Sacchetti</p><h4>Quantitative studies of African Red Slip Ware</h4><p>I have a long term interest in research into Roman economic and settlement histories through the analysis of the chronological and spatial distribution of African Red Slip ware (1st - 7th century AD). In collaboration with colleagues, quantification of a data set of 20,000+ sherds of African Red Slip Ware from field surveys and other representative finds, charts the frequency of imports of the ware into individual areas across the Mediterranean. Deviations from the average frequency reflect the economic history of the area surveyed, and provide a control for using presence of the ware as a dating tool for survey sites. If you have data on red slip ware finds (especially, but not exclusively African) that you are prepared to share please let me know so that the data set can grow even more.</p><p><img alt="ARS supply per year at Monreale with mean" src="http://www.open.ac.uk/people/sites/www.open.ac.uk.people/files/images/monreale.gif" style="height:287px; width:427px" /><br />ARS supply per year at Monreale with mean</p><h4> </h4>
<p>My interest in the Classical world was sparked by an inspiring Latin master and a muddy excavation at Catterick Bridge in North Yorkshire. This led me to the Institute of Archaeology, now part of University College London, where I became involved with archaeological research in Italy. Following graduation, I lived in Italy for the next five years working on research projects, some with the British School at Rome, and teaching at Saint Mary’s College in Rome.</p><p>I developed a specialism in Etruscan archaeology researching in the Albegna Valley near the ancient city of Cosa in southern Tuscany. This collaborative work involved extensive multi-period field survey, excavation and artefact analysis. In 1985-6 I co-directed the first ever excavation of an Etruscan farm site at Podere Tartuchino. The excavation revealed two phases of building and uncovered the earliest wine-press yet found in Italy. The farm remains the only Etruscan farm to be both excavated and fully published.</p><p>In 1991 I was appointed to the Computers in Teaching Initiative Centre for History with Archaeology and Art History in the University of Glasgow promoting the, at that time, new-fangled use of computers in teaching. This led to a part-time post at the Department of History of Art, Birkbeck College, University of London, teaching on an innovative MA in computing for art historians. At the same time I finished my Ph.D. thesis for the University of London on the Etruscan archaeology of the Albegna Valley.</p><p>Meanwhile, in 1992 I co-directed a pioneering post-mediaeval excavation of the Villa Pigneto Sacchetti, a 17<sup>th</sup>century AD baroque villa in Rome designed by the painter and architect Pietro da Cortona.</p><p>I joined the Open University in 1995 and used my experience of educational software, multimedia and image processing in archaeology and art history in developing CD-ROMS for various modules including A103<em>Introduction to the Humanities</em>and A295<em>Homer: Poetry and Society</em>. I have contributed to many other modules including A151 <em>Making sense of things: an introduction to material culture</em>, A219 <em>Exploring the classical world.</em> One of the most exciting and challenging teaching projects was writing an online distance learning module, A251 <em>World Archaeology,</em> that covered the whole globe from the last Ice Age to the 19<sup>th</sup> century CE, taking me a long way in time and space from the Etruscans and Italy. More recently, I authored parts of the MA in Classical Studies, teaching the archaeology of the Colosseum Valley in Rome and bioarchaeological aspects of the ancient body and also various topics on Roman Italy, the Roman economy and Constantine for<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NimxJi1Zfgw" rel="nofollow">A340 <em>The Roman empire</em></a>. At the moment I'm preparing teaching materials on the Roman Republic, focussing on the archaeology and history of the city of Rome, for A229 <em>Exploring the classical world</em>, a new module due to start in 2018.</p><p>Etruscan archaeology remains a focus of my research. During much of 2002 I was seconded to the British Museum and studied some of their Etruscan collection. This led in 2007 to the publication of a definitive study of the Etruscan bucchero ceramics in the British Museum. In the summer of 2007 I joined the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project excavations at the site of<a href="http://www.poggiocolla.org/" rel="nofollow">Poggio Colla</a>to the north east of Florence in Tuscany. I am studying the bucchero from the excavations and have excavated on the lower slopes of the hill, discovering pottery kilns, textile manufacturing and a stone quarry, related to the temple built on the hilltop. In 2014 I explored the earliest phase of the settlement, excavating an oval timber building. This work is now entering a phase of publication as I research the context of the finds and settlement, extending my research to northern Etruria and the Apennine mountains. I have been awarded the Hugh Last Fellowship at the British School at Rome 2016-17 to continue this research in Italian museums and libraries.</p><p>Alongside this teaching and research I have also been Head of the Department of Classical Studies, Sub-Dean for Research and Associate Dean for Curriculum Development in the Faculty of Arts. </p>
Professor Phil Perkins
Perkins
Philip
Phil
P.
2264c2ce866ced8466e55f6c95694177ccc213c8
Professor Phil Perkins
Phil Perkins
P. Perkins
Philip Perkins
<p>My interest in the Classical world was sparked by an inspiring Latin master and a muddy excavation at Catterick Bridge in North Yorkshire. This led me to the Institute of Archaeology, now part of University College London, where I became involved with archaeological research in Italy. Following graduation, I lived in Italy for the next five years working on research projects, some with the British School at Rome, and teaching at Saint Mary’s College in Rome.</p><p>I developed a specialism in Etruscan archaeology researching in the Albegna Valley near the ancient city of Cosa in southern Tuscany. This collaborative work involved extensive multi-period field survey, excavation and artefact analysis. In 1985-6 I co-directed the first ever excavation of an Etruscan farm site at Podere Tartuchino. The excavation revealed two phases of building and uncovered the earliest wine-press yet found in Italy. The farm remains the only Etruscan farm to be both excavated and fully published.</p><p>In 1991 I was appointed to the Computers in Teaching Initiative Centre for History with Archaeology and Art History in the University of Glasgow promoting the, at that time, new-fangled use of computers in teaching. This led to a part-time post at the Department of History of Art, Birkbeck College, University of London, teaching on an innovative MA in computing for art historians. At the same time I finished my Ph.D. thesis for the University of London on the Etruscan archaeology of the Albegna Valley.</p><p>Meanwhile, in 1992 I co-directed a pioneering post-mediaeval excavation of the Villa Pigneto Sacchetti, a 17<sup>th</sup>century AD baroque villa in Rome designed by the painter and architect Pietro da Cortona.</p><p>I joined the Open University in 1995 and used my experience of educational software, multimedia and image processing in archaeology and art history in developing CD-ROMS for various modules including A103<em>Introduction to the Humanities</em>and A295<em>Homer: Poetry and Society</em>. I have contributed to many other modules including A151 <em>Making sense of things: an introduction to material culture</em>, A219 <em>Exploring the classical world.</em> One of the most exciting and challenging teaching projects was writing an online distance learning module, A251 <em>World Archaeology,</em> that covered the whole globe from the last Ice Age to the 19<sup>th</sup> century CE, taking me a long way in time and space from the Etruscans and Italy. More recently, I authored parts of the MA in Classical Studies, teaching the archaeology of the Colosseum Valley in Rome and bioarchaeological aspects of the ancient body and also various topics on Roman Italy, the Roman economy and Constantine for<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NimxJi1Zfgw" rel="nofollow">A340 <em>The Roman empire</em></a>. At the moment I'm preparing teaching materials on the Roman Republic, focussing on the archaeology and history of the city of Rome, for A229 <em>Exploring the classical world</em>, a new module due to start in 2018.</p><p>Etruscan archaeology remains a focus of my research. During much of 2002 I was seconded to the British Museum and studied some of their Etruscan collection. This led in 2007 to the publication of a definitive study of the Etruscan bucchero ceramics in the British Museum. In the summer of 2007 I joined the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project excavations at the site of<a href="http://www.poggiocolla.org/" rel="nofollow">Poggio Colla</a>to the north east of Florence in Tuscany. I am studying the bucchero from the excavations and have excavated on the lower slopes of the hill, discovering pottery kilns, textile manufacturing and a stone quarry, related to the temple built on the hilltop. In 2014 I explored the earliest phase of the settlement, excavating an oval timber building. This work is now entering a phase of publication as I research the context of the finds and settlement, extending my research to northern Etruria and the Apennine mountains. I have been awarded the Hugh Last Fellowship at the British School at Rome 2016-17 to continue this research in Italian museums and libraries.</p><p>Alongside this teaching and research I have also been Head of the Department of Classical Studies, Sub-Dean for Research and Associate Dean for Curriculum Development in the Faculty of Arts. </p>