*** Welcome to piglix ***

Martha Sharp Joukowsky

Martha Sharp Joukowsky
Born Martha Content Sharp
2 September 1936
Montague, Massachusetts
Academic background
Alma mater Pembroke College, Brown University
Pantheon-Sorbonne University
Academic work
Discipline Archaeology
Sub discipline Near Eastern archaeology
Institutions Brown University
Archaeological Institute of America
Main interests Excavations at Petra in Jordan

Martha Sharp Joukowsky (born 2 September 1936) is a Near Eastern archaeologist and a retired member of the faculty of Brown University known for her fieldwork at the ancient site of Petra in Jordan.

Martha Sharp Joukowsky is the daughter of Waitstill Hastings Sharp and Martha Ingham Dickie, noted for aiding Jews escaping Nazi persecution in Czechoslovakia during World War II. Joukowsky was educated at Pembroke College (B.A. 1958) and Paris I-Sorbonne (Ph.D. 1982).

From 1982 to 2002 Joukowsky was Professor in the Center for Old World Archaeology and Art and the Department of Anthropology at Brown University. Her archaeological fieldwork has included work in Lebanon (1967-1972), Hong Kong (1972-1973), Turkey (1975-1986), Italy (1982-1985), and Greece (1987-1990). Joukowsky conducted archaeological fieldwork at Petra in Jordan for more than ten years, beginning in 1992. Her work, and that of Brown University, focused on Petra's so-called "Great Temple" during that time.

Martha Sharp Joukowsky was also elected as President (1989-1993) of the Archaeological Institute of America and was Trustee for the American University of Beirut, Lebanon. She also serves as Trustee Emerita of Brown University.

Artemis A. W. Joukowsky, her husband, was chancellor of Brown University (1997–98) and together they created the Artemis A.W. and Martha Sharp Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World at Brown University in 2004; the institute was first directed by Susan Alcock, who was succeeded in the post by Peter van Dommelen.

In 1993 Joukowsky endowed an annual lecture series in her own name for the Archaeological Institute of America


...
Wikipedia

...