No photo of Annette Rathje

Annette Rathje

  • Karen Blixens Plads 8

    2300 København S

1991 …2019

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Knowledge of languages

Danish, Italian, English, German and French

Fields of interest

Meeting of cultures

Body and materiality

Iconography

The reception of Antiquity

Primary fields of research

Etruscan archaeology

Interaction in the Mediterranean 8th-6th centuries BCE

The Iron Age of Central Italy

Current research

The power & meaning of images

Etruscan sculpture

Publication of Giacomo Boni's excavation og the "Sepolcreto" at the Forum Romanum at Rome

Publication of zone 5A at Ficana, Latium Vetus 

CV

 

 

 

 

1972  Magister artium in Classical Archaeology at the University of Copenaghen

 

1973-77 Research in Rome ( funded by various foundations)

 

1977  Kandidatstipendium at the Institute for Classical  Studies, University of Odense.

 

1978-1984 Vicedirector at the Danish Institute in Rome

 

1985 Research Scholarship from the Carlsberg Foundation.

 

1986-87 Teaching at the Institute of Classical Archaeology, University of Copenhagen, as assistent professor.

 

1988 Research scholarship from The Danish Government (SHF)

 

From 1988 Associated professor of Classical archaeology at the University of Copenhagen.

 

1990-1998 Vice director of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology.

 

1999-2004 Director of the  Institute of Archaeology and Etnology

 

2004 -2005 Vicedirector of the Saxo instituttet (Archaeology, Ethnology, History and Greek & Latin)

 

Since 1992 Boardmember of The Danish Institute at Athens.

 

1995-2002 Boardmember of  Antikprogrammet, Research Council of Norway

 

Since 2001 Expert consult in Research Council of Norway

 

Director of the Network Antiquity Rediscovered (2000-2001 SHF).

 

Founder of Collegium Hyperboreum and co editor of

Acta Hyperborea. Danish Studies in Classical Archaeology vol III, IV, VII, IX, X, XI.

 

Advisory Board member of the journals Ancient West and East (Brill Leiden. Boston. Köln),  Mediterranea (Pisa.& Rome), Aristhonotos (Milano) and Officina (Rome)

 

Keywords

  • Faculty of Humanities
  • etruscan archaeology