Authors: Ladies of the Field: Early Women Archaeologists,Their Search for Adventure
Tags: #BIO022000
Nuttall, Zelia. “The Terra-Cotta Heads of Teotihuacan.”
American Journal of Archaeology
2
(
1886
):
157
–
178
,
318
–
330
.
——. “Standard or Head Dress?”
Archaeological and ethnological papers
of the Peabody Museum.
1
, issue
1
. Cambridge Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology,
1888
:
1
–
52
.
——. “Ancient Mexican Superstitions.”
Journal of American Folklore
10
(
1897
):
275
–
81
.
——. “The Fundamental Principles of Old and New World Civilizations.”
Archaeological and ethnological papers of the Peabody Museum
2
. Cambridge Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology,
1901
.
——. “The Island of Sacrificios.”
American Anthropologist,
New Series,
12
no.
2
(
1910
):
257
–
295
.
——. “New Light on Drake: a collection of documents relating to his voyage of circumnavigation
1577
–
1580
,”
Hakluyt Society,
series
2
, no.
34
(
1914
).
——. “Origin of the Maya Calendar.” Science
45
(
1927
): supplements
12
and
14
.
——. “The New Year of Tropical Indigenes: The New Year Festival of the Ancient Inhabitants of Tropical America and Its Revival.”
The Pan American Union,
1928
:
9
.
——.
The Codex Nuttall: A Picture Manuscript From Ancient Mexico.
Edited by Zelia Nuttall with an Introduction by Arthur G. Miller. New York: Dover Publications, Inc.,
1975
.
O’Brien, Rosemary, ed.
Gertrude Bell: The Arabian Diaries,
1913–1914.
Syracuse,
NY
: Syracuse University Press,
2000
.
Olafson, Erna Hellerstein and Leslie Parker Hume and Karen M. Offen, eds.
Victorian Women: A Documentary Account of Women’s Lives
in Nineteenth-Century England, France, and the United States.
Stanford,
CA
: Stanford University Press,
1981
.
Parmenter, Ross. “Glimpses of a Friendship: Zelia Nuttall and Franz Boas. (Based on their Correspondence in the Library of the American Philosophical Society of Philadelphia.)” In
Pioneers of American Anthropology.
Edited by June Helm. Seattle: University of Washington Press,
1966
:
88
–
147
.
Petrie, Sir William Matthew Flinders
Tombs of the courtiers and
Oxyrhynkhos,
with chapters by Alan Gardiner, Hilda Petrie and M.A. Murray. London: British School of Archaeology in Egypt,
1925
.
Rees, Joan.
Writings on the Nile: Harriet Martineau, Florence Nightingale,
Amelia Edwards.
London: Rubicon,
1995
.
Smith, Pamela Jane.
A Splendid Idiosyncrasy: Prehistory at Cambridge
1915–50.
Oxford: British Archaeological Reports,
2009
.
——. “Gathering Roses in Winter.”
British Archaeology
7
:
10
–
14
.
——. “From ‘small dark and alive’ to cripplingly shy’: Dorothy Garrod as the first woman Professor at Cambridge.” Cambridge,
UK
: Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge University. No pub date. Online article accessed February
2009
http://www.arch.cam.ac.uk/~pjs
1011
/Pams.html
.
Smith, Pamela Jane, Jane Callander, Paul G. Bahn, and Geneviève Pinçon. “Dorothy Garrod in words and pictures.”
Antiquity
71
(
1997
):
265
–
270
.
Tozzer, Alfred M. “Zelia Nuttall Obituary.”
American Anthropologist
35
(
1933
):
475
–
482
.
Trigger, Bruce G.
A History of Archaeological Thought.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1989
.
Trümpler, Charlotte, ed.
Agatha Christie and Archaeology.
London: The British Museum Press,
2001
.
White, Nancy Marie, Lynne P. Sullivan and Rochelle A Marrinan, eds.
Grit-Tempered: Early Women Archaeologists in the Southeastern United
States.
Gainesville,
FL
: University Press of Florida,
1999
.
Wylie, Alison. “Introduction.”
Archaeological Papers of the American
Anthropological Association,
1994
:
1
–
4
.
Agatha Christie: An Autobiography
by Agatha Christie
A History of Archaeological Thought
by Bruce G. Trigger
Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association
Volume
5
, Issue
1
,
1994
[a valuable collection of scholarly articles examining the history of women in archaeology]
A Splendid Idiosyncrasy: Prehistory at Cambridge
1915–50
by Pamela Jane Smith
A Thousand Miles Up the Nile: A woman’s journey among the treasures
of ancient Egypt
by Amelia Edwards
Born to Rebel: The Life of Harriet Boyd Hawes
by Mary Allsebrook
Breaking Ground: Pioneering Women Archaeologists.
Editors Getzel M. Cohen and Martha Sharp Joukowsky
Come, Tell Me How You Live
by Agatha Christie Mallowan
Gertrude Bell: Queen of the Desert, Shaper of Nations
by Georgina Howell
More Usefully Employed: Amelia B. Edwards, Writer, Traveller
and Campaigner for Ancient Egypt
by Brenda Moon
The Desert and the Sown
by Gertrude Bell
Women in Archaeology
edited by Cheryl Classen
OTHER SOURCES WORTH CHECKING OUT:
The “Breaking Ground” database, a growing inventory of biographies of women pioneers in archaeology with continual updates and new stories to discover:
http://www.brown.edu/Research/Breaking_Ground/
The Gertrude Bell Archive, a fascinating online search of Bell’s photographs, letters, and diaries:
http://gertrudebell.ncl.ac.uk/index.php
Ladies of the Field
would not have been possible without the assistance, support, and work of scholars and friends. Professor Martha Sharp Joukowsky, co-editor of the book
Breaking Ground:
Pioneering Women Archaeologists,
provided early encouragement for this project; my sincere thanks for the enthusiasm and support.
Professor Margot Irvine at the University of Gelph was exceptionally helpful in my research of Jane Dieulafoy, as was Béatrice André-Salvini, Conservateur general, chef du departement des Antiquités Orientales at the Louvre, Paris. I am also indebted to Fabienne Queyroux, Conservateur en Chef at the Bibliothèque de l’Institut en Académei Français for humoring my terrible French and for helping me navigate the archive’s permissions process. Catherine Stevenson and Dr. Margret Dubin are also warmly acknowledged for providing me with French translations of Jane Dieulafoy’s material.
Jessica Zimmer provided me with some initial research assistance, and LeeAnn Barnes continued to be my personal “arch-angel” by forwarding me so many items of interest over the past year. Jody Michael Gordon, PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati, Department of Classics, suggested that I consider including Agatha Christie in the book, and that suggestion was happily seized upon. Yuki Furyuya, also a PhD student at the University of Cincinnati, Classics Department and currently working in Greece, kindly sent me a rare article written by Harriet Boyd Hawes from the Smithsonian Institute.
Dr. Pamela Jane Smith is the remarkable scholar who uncovered the “lost” archives belonging to Dorothy Garrod. For her cooperation in allowing me to read and cite her work I am most grateful.
Thanks must also be extended to my mother, Kathy, who joined me in Paris, saved us both with her very good French, and walked enough Metro stairs to last a lifetime. Several people read early chapter drafts: my amazing brothers Kevin and Tim Adams, and dear friends Erisa Coppernoll and Emily Cook. My husband, Matthew Hinde, read the whole manuscript (at least twice) and always brought me a steady supply of laughs and love throughout the project’s duration. Thank you all.
And last, sincere thanks to my wonderful editor, Nancy Flight, whose generous insights and comments I always look forward to and value so highly. I’m also grateful to my publisher, Rob Sanders, for his ongoing vision and support. Everyone at Greystone Books is a treat to work with—special thanks also to Lara Kordic, Lara Smith, Carra Simpson, and Emiko Morita.
"The page numbers in this index refer to the print edition of this book."
Italicized page numbers indicate figures. Page numbers for notes are followed by “n” and the note number.
Abu Simbel (Egypt),
30
–
34
,
197
n
21
Adam, Juliette,
60
Allsebrook, Mary (née Hawes),
117
–
18
,
119
,
133
Allyn, Harriet,
175
American Anthropologist
,
83
American Association for the Advancement of Science,
70
American School of Classical Studies (Athens),
118
–
19
Antiquities of Mexico
(Lord Kingsborough),
67
–
68
antiquity preservation laws,
90
,
105
,
110
–
11
Appointment with Death
(A. Christie),
138
Archaeological Institute of America,
123
,
125
,
130
archaeology: entry of women into the discipline,
1
–
5
,
7
–
12
,
186
–
88
; prominence of women,
174
–
77
; romance and reality of,
12
–
15
; travelogues vs. science,
161
–
62
,
192
; as treasure hunting,
1
–
2
,
129
–
30
; universal appeal of,
183
,
188
–
92
artifacts,
13
,
48
,
123
,
155
,
169
,
189
; Christie’s methodological contributions,
152
–
53
; Garrod’s methodological contributions,
172
–
73
; photography of,
154
–
55
; potsherds,
194
; transportation and export of,
33
–
34
,
53
–
54
,
55
; treasures vs. everyday objects,
35
,
129
–
30
; of Upper Paleolithic,
169
–
70
.
See
also
antiquity preservation laws
Aswan Cataract,
29
–
30
At the Works: A Study of a
Manufacturing Town
(F. Bell),
95
Barine, Arvède,
60
Batres, Leopoldo,
82
,
83
–
84
Batres, Salvador,
82
Bell, Florence (née Ollife),
93
,
94
–
95
Bell, Gertrude Lowthian,
88
,
89
–
91
; and Anti-Suffrage League,
90
,
114
; as archaeological traveler,
4
,
102
–
3
,
105
–
7
,
110
,
131
; at Binbir Kilise,
106
–
7
; botanical knowledge,
92
–
93
; clothing preferences,
99
,
100
,
104
; death of,
115
; and Dorothy Garrod, compared,
178
; early years, family, and education,
92
–
97
; field conditions,
98
–
99
,
99
,
100
–
101
,
104
,
106
; financial dependence,
101
–
2
; Iraqi independence and National Museum,
89
,
105
,
107
–
11
,
115
; and King Faisal,
102
,
109
; Law of Antiquities,
105
,
110
–
11
; linguistic abilities,
98
; as mapmaker,
105
; mountaineering exploits,
100
; in Persia (
1892
),
97
–
98
,
111
; at Petra (
1900
),
102
–
3
; as photographer,
105
; quest for identity,
113
–
15
,
187
; romantic disappointments,
111
–
13
; in Syria (
1905
),
106