Members of the Centre for the Study of the Ancient Mediterranean and the Near East

Dr Robert Witcher, BA (Hons) MA PhD
Contact Dr Robert Witcher (email at r.e.witcher@durham.ac.uk)
BIOGRAPHY
Career
- Reviews/Deputy Editor of Antiquity, 2013-
- Senior Lecturer in Classical Archaeology, Durham University, UK 2009-
- Lecturer in Classical Archaeology, Durham University, UK 2004-2009
- Temporary Lecturer University of Southampton, UK 2003-4
- Leverhulme Research Fellow The British School at Rome, Italy 1999-2002
RESEARCH
My twin research interests are Roman archaeology and landscape archaeology.
Roman archaeology
My interest in Roman archaeology extends from the core of the Empire (Italy) to the imperial periphery (Britain). I am currently working on the countryside, economy and demography of Italy c.500BC to AD300. In particular, I am interested in the similarities and differences between areas such as the hinterland of Rome (the suburbium) and more peripheral landscapes such as the Biferno valley in the Molise. I am also interested in developing economic and agrarian approaches to the rural landscapes of Roman Italy in order to encompass complementary issues such as social organization, consumption and embodied experience. More generally, I am interested to locate the archaeology of Roman Italy within its broader Mediterranean context. Recent research has included the development of modelling approaches to assess the size and composition of ancient populations and agricultural output which involves integrating historical and archaeological evidence with technologies such as GIS. I am currently exploring the Roman peasant in the context of revisionist ideas about the Roman economy, agriculture, health and identity.
Landscape archaeology
All aspects of the theory and practice of landscape archaeology interest me, from sampling patterns and statistical analysis to phenomenology and experiential surveying. I am particularly interested in how varied theories and methods can be usefully combined to enhance our understanding of past landscapes.
My doctoral research (Modelling Roman Imperialism: Landscape and Settlement Change in Italy) evaluated field surveys across peninsular Italy in order to characterize regional settlement and landscape organization in the context of imperial dialogues. This revealed marked settlement diversity across Italy and emphasized the need for a range of interpretative models at a series of spatial and temporal scales. After completing my thesis, I had the opportunity to participate in the restudy of one of the pioneering Italian (and Mediterranean) field surveys – the South Etruria Survey. As part of the Tiber Valley Project, based at the British School at Rome, I have been studying the impact of the emergence and transformation of the City of Rome on its northern hinterland from 1000 BC to AD 1000. As well as the rural landscapes of the pre-Roman and Roman periods, I am particularly interested in the historiography and methodologies of survey work.
I have published on phenomenology, computer techniques including GIS, comparative survey techniques and theoretical contributions, as well as articles on the landscape of pre-Roman and Roman Italy.
Beyond the Mediterranean, I have recently completed an AHRC-funded project which brought together my interests in Roman and landscape archaeology. Along with Durham colleagues, I explored the post-Roman history of Hadrian's Wall and the history of its study and visual representation from the writings of the Venerable Bede through to the age of the internet. In particular I focused on the the social and cultural history of this iconic monument in terms of its wider landscape using a range of theoretical ideas such as representation, embodiment and experience. An online exhibition based on visitor surveys can be found here. Following on from this research, I am currently working on the idea of globalization and Roman archaeology, both in the past and in relation to heritage monuments such as Hadrian's Wall in the present.
Research postgraduates
I currently supervise research students working on varied aspects of Roman and landscape archaeology from Scotland to the Mediterranean, making use of techniques such as GIS, aerial photography and palaeopathology to develop innovative new approaches to monuments such as the Antonine Wall and to understand topics such as religion, burial and settlement in the ancient world. If you are interested in undertaking postgraduate research, please feel free to contact me to discuss your ideas.
Research Groups
Department of Archaeology
- Landscapes of Complex Society Research Group
- North East Research Group
Research Projects
Department of Archaeology
- Tales of the Frontier: political representations and practices inspired by Hadrian's Wall
- The Upper Simeto Valley Project (Sicily): an Inside-out View of a Rediscovered Landscape
Research Interests
- Archaeological computing
- Geographical Information Systems
- Landscape archaeology - field survey
- Landscape archaeology - methods
- Landscape archaeology - theories
- Pre-Roman and Roman Italy
Selected Publications
- 1: Witcher, R.E. (2012). 'That From A Long Way Off Look Like Farms': The Classification of Roman Rural Sites. In Comparative Issues in the Archaeology of the Roman Rural Landscape. Site Classification Between Survey, Excavation and Historical Categories. Attema, P.A.J. & Schörner, G. Journal of Roman Archaeology. JRA Supplementary Series 88: 11-30.
- 2: Witcher, R.E. & Craven, M. (2012). ‘Much That Has Long Been Hidden’ Reconstructing the Survey Methodology. In Veii. The Historical Topography of the Ancient City. A Restudy of John Ward-Perkins’s Survey. Cascino, R., Di Giuseppe, H. & Patterson, H.L. London: British School at Rome. 9-24.
- 3: Hingley, R., Witcher, R.E. & Nesbitt, C. (2012). Life of an Ancient Monument: Hadrian's Wall in History. Antiquity 86(333): 760-771.
- 4: Witcher, R.E. (2011). Missing persons? Models of Mediterranean Regional Survey and Ancient Populations. In Settlement, Urbanization and Population. Bowman, A. & Wilson, A. Oxford Oxford University Press. Oxford Studies in the Roman Economy 2: 36-75.
- 5: Witcher, R.E. (2010). The Fabulous Tales of the Common People, Part 2: Encountering Hadrian’s Wall. Public Archaeology 9(4): 211-238.
- 6: Witcher, R.E. (2010). The Fabulous Tales of the Common People, Part 1: Representing Hadrian’s Wall. Public Archaeology 9(3): 126-152.
- 7: Goodchild, H. & Witcher, R.E. (2010). Modelling the Agricultural Landscapes of Republican Italy. In Agricoltura e scambi nell’Italia tardo repubblicana. Carlsen, J. & Lo Cascio, E. Rome & Bari: Edipuglia. 187-220.
- 8: Witcher, R.E., Tolia-Kelly, D.P. & Hingley, R. (2010). Archaeologies of Landscape. Excavating the Materialities of Hadrian's Wall. Journal of Material Culture 15(1): 105-128.
- 9: Kay, S.J. & Witcher, R.E. (2010). Predictive Modelling of Roman Settlement in the Middle Tiber Valley. Archeologia e Calcolatori 20(2009): 277-290.
- 10: Witcher, R.E. (2009). The Countryside. In A Companion to Ancient History. Erskine, A. Oxford: Blackwell. 462-473.
- 11: Witcher, R.E. (2008). (Re)surveying Mediterranean Rural Landscapes: GIS and Legacy Survey Data. Internet Archaeology 24.
- 12: Witcher, R.E. (2008). Regional Field Survey and the Demography of Roman Italy. In People, Land and Politics. Demographic Developments and the Transformation of Roman Italy, 300BC-AD14. de Ligt, L. & Northwood, S. Leiden: Brill. 303: 273-303.
- 13: Witcher, R.E. (2008). The Middle Tiber Valley in the Imperial Period. In Mercator Placidissimus. The Tiber Valley in Antiquity. New Research in the Upper and Middle River Valley. Coarelli, F. & Patterson, H. Rome: Quasar. 467-486.
- 15: Witcher, R.E. (2006). Agrarian spaces in Roman Italy: society, economy and Mediterranean agriculture. Arqueología espacial (Paisajes agrarios) 26: 341-359.
- 16: Witcher, R.E. (2006). Broken Pots and Meaningless Dots? Surveying the Rural Landscapes of Roman Italy. Papers of the British School at Rome 74: 39-72.
- 17: Witcher, R.E. (2006). Settlement and Society in Early Imperial Etruria. Journal of Roman Studies 96: 88-123.
- 20: Witcher, R.E. (2005). The Extended Metropolis: Urbs, Suburbium and Population. Journal of Roman Archaeology 18: 120-138.
GRADUATE STUDENTS
Archaeology
- Heba Abd El Gawad h.h.abd-el-gawad@durham.ac.uk (the self-presentation of Ptolemy II Philadelphus: media manipulation and political advertising during the Ptolemaic period)
- Saud Al-Ghamdi s.a.al-ghamdi@durham.ac.uk (Neolithic settlement in the south-west of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia)
- Waleed Alsadeqi waleed.alsadeqi@durham.ac.uk (Arabian archaeology)
- Arthur Anderson arthur.anderson@durham.ac.uk
- George Azzopardi george.azzopardi@durham.ac.uk (Sacred spaces and religion in a Mediterranean island setting: the Maltese context (800 B.C.-A.D. 500))
- Jennie Bradbury j.n.bradbury@durham.ac.uk (Landscapes of burial in Syria)
- William Cooney william.cooney@durham.ac.uk (Libyan influences in Egypt during the 1st Millennium BC)
- Maria Correas-Amador maria.correas-amador@durham.ac.uk ("'Down to earth' architecture: mud and organic structures in Ancient and Modern Egypt" aims to combine architectural, archaeological and ethnographic methods to understand the socio-cultural factors involved in the act of building and space distribution, and the reciprocal influence that domestic structures and community life exert over each other)
- Rana Daroogheh-Nokhodcheri rana.daroogheh@durham.ac.uk (The influence of imperialism on the history of archaeology in Iran)
- T A Fitton t.a.fitton@durham.ac.uk
- Amr Gaber amr.gaber@durham.ac.uk (The function of the central hall in the Egyptian temples of the Ptolemaic and Roman periods)
- Lyn Gatland lyn.gatland@durham.ac.uk (The wedjat-eye amulet in Ancient Egypt: morphological development and iconographic significance)
- Michelle de Gruchy michelle.de-gruchy@durham.ac.uk (Prehistoric Routes of the Middle East)
- Kristen Hopper k.a.hopper@durham.ac.uk (Long-term population trends and settlement in Southwest Iran)
- Emmanouil Kalkanis emmanouil.kalkanis@durham.ac.uk (Classical art and its impact in eighteenth century musem collections)
- R C Lange r.c.lange@durham.ac.uk
- Francis Lankester f.d.lankester@durham.ac.uk (Rock art in Egypt's eastern desert)
- Dan Lawrence dan.lawrence@durham.ac.uk
- Mark Manuel m.j.manuel@durham.ac.uk (Hidden agendas: testing models of the social an political organisation of the Indus valley tradition)
- Jenny Marshall j.l.marshall@durham.ac.uk (Missing links: demic diffusion and the development of agriculture in the central Iranian plateau)
- Eric Olijdam eric.olijdam@durham.ac.uk (Dilmun during the 2nd millennium BC)
- Louise Rayne louise.rayne@durham.ac.uk (landscape archaelogy , and especially the application of GIS, of the Neo-Assyrian empire)
- D J Rohl d.j.rohl@durham.ac.uk
- J E Shoebridge j.e.shoebridge@durham.ac.uk
- Keir Strickland k.m.strickland@durham.ac.uk ("The Jungle Tide: Urban Collapse in Early Mediaeval Sri Lanka" aims to reconsider the existing explanations for the 11th century urban collapse of the city of Anuradhapura through explicit reference to the archaeological record as well as recent developments in the field of societal and urban collapse theory)
- Veronica Tamorri veronica.tamorri@durham.ac.uk
- Matthew Whincop m.r.whincop@durham.ac.uk (A reconsideration of the role of ceramics in reconstructions of the iron age northern Levant)
Classics and Ancient History
- Peter Alpass p.j.alpass@durham.ac.uk (The religious life of Nabatea)
- Mirko Canevaro mirko.canevaro@durham.ac.uk (Ancient Greek law, esp. the question of the authenticity of the documents inserted in the speeches of the Attic orators)
- Dominic Dalglish d.b.dalglish@durham.ac.uk (Communal identity in the Near East during the Principate)
- Lilah-Grace Fraser l.g.fraser@dur.ac.uk (Hesiod's Works and Days, and epic from a comparative perspective.)
- Louise Hodgson l.l.hodgson@durham.ac.uk (Politics, politicians and political philosophy in the late Roman Republic and early Principate)
- Youssri Hussein y.e.hussein@durham.ac.uk (Egyptian Cultural Identity in the Architectural Forms of the Egyptian Cities in the Roman Period)
- David Lewis d.m.lewis@durham.ac.uk (Greek slavery in a comparative perspective)
- Francesca Mazzilli francesca.mazzilli@durham.ac.uk (Beyond Religion: multidisciplinary approach to Roman Rural Sanctuaries in Syria and Lebanon)
- Henrikus van Wijlick h.a.van-wijlick@durham.ac.uk (Foreign powers and the Roman Empire in periods of civil war, 44 BC - AD 284)
- Mark Wildish mark.wildish@durham.ac.uk (Horapollo's Hieroglyphica (Graeco-Egyptian philosophical linguistics))
Physics
- Jennifer Gray j.m.k.gray@durham.ac.uk
Theology and Religion
- Ben Blackwell b.c.blackwell@durham.ac.uk
- Maria Chrysovergi maria.chrysovergi@durham.ac.uk
- Robert Cavin robertcavin@yahoo.com
- Joan Crooks Joan.Crooks@durham.ac.uk
- Andrew Cunningham a.d.cunningham@durham.ac.uk
- Douglas Earl d.s.earl@durham.ac.uk
- Judith Fain judith@fains.com
- James Fowler j.t.fowler@durham.ac.uk
- John Goodrich j.k.goodrich@durham.ac.uk
- Nijay Gupta nijay.gupta@gmail.com
- Ed Kaneen e.n.kaneen@durham.ac.uk
- Brad Matthews b.j.matthews@durham.ac.uk
- Sam Newington s.j.newington@durham.ac.uk
- Dean Pinter d.l.pinter@durham.ac.uk
- Tyson Putthoff t.l.putthoff@durham.ac.uk (Transformational Mysticism of Antique and Late Antique Jewish Thought)
- William Telford w.r.telford@durham.ac.uk
- Jennifer Wilkinson jennifer.wilkinson@durham.ac.uk
