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Beatriz Noria-Serrano: “Middle Kingdom Theban Project: Recent Fieldwork + Findings”

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You will receive Zoom link and calendar invite upon registration. This lecture will begin at 4PM BST (London)/11AM EST (New York). Additional time zone conversions can be found below. The lecture will be via Zoom; as a reminder, it will not be recorded.

We are pleased to welcome Beatriz Noria Serrano as a guest lecturer to share insights and recent fieldwork findings from the Middle Kingdom Theban Project, where is she is the Deputy Director.

Beatriz studied history at the University of Seville and received a master’s degree in Egyptology at the University of Liverpool. She currently holds a doctorate at the University of Alcalá, which focuses on the role of women during the Middle Kingdom and the Second Intermediate Period, based on the contrails and inscriptions of these periods.

Beatriz participated in the excavation of the “Villa Romana del Casale” (Piazza Armerina, Sicily) in 2014. In 2019 she received a scholarship from the Higher Council for Scientific Research (CSIC) in Madrid under the supervision of Dr. Jose Manuel Galán.There, she studied the administration of the end of the seventeenth dynasty, especially the officers under the command of Queen Mother Ahhotep and King Ahmose.

Beatriz received a scholarship from the Government of Spain to carry out her doctoral thesis at the University of Alcalá under the supervision of Dr. Antonio Morales and she continued to work at Alcalá since July 2019. Her primary field of study is the administration of the Middle Kingdom and the Second Intermediate Period as well as gender and family studies, combining Egyptological, archaeological and anthropological methodology.

Time zone conversions:

  • London - 4:00 pm BST

  • Rome - 5:00 pm CEST

  • New York - 11:00 am EDT

  • Los Angeles - 8:00 am PDT

  • Melbourne - 1:00 am AEST

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May 19

Raúl Sánchez Casado: “Reconstructing Old Kingdom Society through the Necropolis: The Invisible Networks Project”

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June 10

Morgan Moroney: "Figural Forms: An Investigation of Brooklyn 49.53 and 61.9"