908 search results for “east area” in the Staff website
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Emmanuel WalesonFaculty of Humanities
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Jort GerritsFaculty of Humanities
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Mirthe FischerFaculty of Humanities
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Xin TongFaculty of Humanities
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Bálint HegedüsFaculty of Humanities
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Nasreen JavanjooFaculty of Humanities
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Ayelet KotlerFaculty of Humanities
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Günes EkmekciFaculty of Humanities
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Netherlands feed mainly on wild animals – but also target grazing cattle in areas with less prey
Wolves in the Netherlands mainly feed on wild animals such as wild boar and red and roe deer. But in areas such as Drenthe where these are scarce they also prey on free-roaming cattle used for nature conservation
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Miriam MüllerFaculty of Humanities
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Sigrid van Roode: ‘Zār jewellery reveals the world of unseen Egyptians’
Zār jewellery from Egypt can be found in many museums and private collections in the West, but for a long time very little was known about it, except that it was used in rituals to protect against spirit possession. PhD candidate Sigrid van Roode has explored its history and discovered that the jewellery…
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Still Seeking Permission To Narrate: On International Law And The Question Of Palestine
Lecture
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Palestinian-Israeli Coexistence in the Middle East
Debate
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Forecasting Finlandization: How will Xi’s China seek to revise East Asia’s regional order?
Lecture
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LUCIR Seminar: Refugees and asylum seekers in East Asia: Perspectives from Japan and Taiwan
Debate
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Christopher GreenFaculty of Humanities
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Lennart Kruijer wins Praemium Erasmianum Dissertation Prize with thesis on ancient Commagene
The prestigious Praemium Erasmianum Dissertation Prize is annually awarded to the five best dissertations published in the year before in the fields of Humanities, Social sciences and Law. During a festive ceremony in Utrecht Lennart Kruijer received the award from the hands of professor Bas ter Haar…
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Book Landscapes of Survival sheds new light on the habitation of the Jordan deserts
December 2020 saw the crowning publication of the Landscapes of Survival project by Professor Peter Akkermans. Its main topic is human habitation in marginal environments like the deserts of the Arabian Peninsula. ‘The people living here built their own society, and they would not have viewed it as…
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Shared Histories, Different Memories: Dutch East India Company (VOC) histories entwined with Australian aboriginal narratives
Conference
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Monique ArntzFaculty of Archaeology
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Vici for Petra Sijpesteijn: 'Islamic Empire rapidly became unified'
After the death of the Prophet Muhammad, the Islamic Empire expanded at a tremendous pace. Within a hundred years, it stretched from the Atlantic Ocean to the Indian subcontinent. How did such a rapidly conquered territory become one empire? Professor Petra Sijpesteijn has been awarded a Vici grant…
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A semester in Morocco: ‘You see the history that you’re learning about’
The Netherlands Institute in Morocco is open to students from all Dutch universities. Two students explain why they are spending a semester studying in Rabat.
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Jan Gerrit DercksenFaculty of Humanities
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Workshop Early Photography of the Middle East - In Contact with Collections
Workshop
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Verticality, Agronomic Turn, and the Making of Colonial Botany in the Dutch East Indies
Lecture, Global Histories of Knowledge Seminar
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EAMENA (Endangered Archaeology of the Middle East and North Africa): One database to rule them all?
Lecture
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Mark Driessen's Jordan fieldwork features in Photo Exhibition
The National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden features a small photo exhibition on Mark Driessen's fieldwork research project in Southern Jordan. In this small exhibition you will see a selection of nine photos, made in Udhruh. This ancient Jordanian settlement lies fifteen kilometres east of Petra,…
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We need to talk about methods. The methodological potential of Area Studies within the Humanities
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
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Scientific Integrity for PhD candidates in Archaeology and the Humanities
Research
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The Transformation of Science Systems in the Middle East and North Africa
PhD defence
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Tracing mobility and connection to place in the world’s first farming villages
How did people move and form communities when human societies first shifted from hunting and gathering to farming? A new study of the Neolithic period in southwest Asia, the birthplace of agriculture, offers fresh insights.
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Library and education
The Leiden University Library (UBL) has more to offer to lecturers than you might think. The UBL can provide you with general rules for copyright in Blackboard, information skills training for your students, or the option of using library collections as part of your teaching.
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PoortgebouwRijnsburgerweg 10, Leiden
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Marian Klamer on Science: 'Language is regularly used to legitimize a shared cultural history'
A newly opened museum in China appears to be devoted to the origins of the Austronesian-speaking peoples, who some 5000 years ago spread from East Asia across the Pacific, seeding it with a distinctive culture and some 1200 languages. But those displays are also a statement in the long-running dispute…
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Sabrina NemethFaculty of Humanities
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Daniel LeeFaculty of Humanities
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Bamdad AminzadehgoharriziFaculty of Humanities
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Sirinya WattanasukchaiFaculty of Humanities
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Tianmu HongFaculty of Humanities
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Yanchen GuoFaculty of Humanities
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Jingzhao YangFaculty of Humanities
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Yifan HuFaculty of Humanities
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Guita WinkelFaculty of Humanities
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Anwesha SenguptaFaculty of Humanities
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Nolke TasmaFaculty of Humanities
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Yangdong WangFaculty of Humanities
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Ömer Faruk CengizFaculty of Humanities
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Ronald KonFaculty of Humanities
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Chen ZengFaculty of Humanities
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Wilt IdemaFaculty of Humanities