Ken Dark

British archaeologist and academic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kenneth Rainsbury Dark (born in Brixton, London), usually known as Ken Dark, is a British archaeologist and historian who specializes on 1st millennium AD Europe and the Middle East (especially Late Antiquity, the end of Roman Britain and the sub-Roman kingdoms which succeeded it, the Byzantine world, early Christianity, Roman and post-Roman urbanism, and connectivity), archaeological theory and method, and on the relationship between the study of the past and contemporary global political and cultural issues.[1][2]

Biography

He received a BA in archaeology from the University of York[3] and after taking his PhD in archaeology and history at the University of Cambridge was attached to Cambridge, Oxford, Reading and King's College London.[4][5] Leaving King's College London in 2025 he returned to the University of Cambridge,[6] where he is currently based at St Edmund's College[7][8] and is also a Fellow of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research and a Visiting Professor at the Institute of Orthodox Christian Studies.[9] At the University of Reading he became Professor of Archaeology and History and was director of the Research Centre for Late Antique and Byzantine Studies, and has continued to hold a professorial title since that time [10][11][12]

He holds honorary professorships from several European and American universities,[13][14] has written 15 books and many academic articles [15][16], and has directed and co-directed excavations and survey projects, both in Britain, including at Tintagel in Cornwall [17][18] and at St. Augustine's Abbey at Canterbury in Kent[19][20][21][22] – and the Middle East, including in Istanbul (Turkey) – where between 1997 and 2018 he co-directed both a rescue archaeology project on the Roman and Byzantine capital city and an archaeological study of the Byzantine church of Hagia Sophia and its environs[23][24][25] – and on the Roman and Byzantine periods in and around Nazareth (Israel) and on the shores of the Sea of Galilee.[26][27][28] His research in the Middle East, Britain and elsewhere has been the subject of extensive international media attention since 2015.[29][30][31][32]

He is a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, the Royal Historical Society,the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, and a member of the Royal Institute of International Affairs and the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, the only person ever to be elected to all of these learned societies.[33][34]

Works

Selected bibliography

  • Dark, Ken (2023). Archaeology of Jesus' Nazareth. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192865397.
  • Dark, Ken; Kostenec, Jan (2023). Hagia Sophia in Context: An Archaeological Re-examination of the Cathedral of Byzantine Constantinople. Oxbow Books. ISBN 9781789259872.
  • Dark, Ken; Özgümüş, Ferudun (2022). Constantinople: Archaeology of a Byzantine Megapolis. Oxbow Books. ISBN 9781789258066.
  • Dark, Ken (2021). The Sisters of Nazareth Convent: a Roman-period, Byzantine and Crusader site in central Nazareth. Routledge. ISBN 9780367542191.
  • Dark, Ken (2021). Roman-period and Byzantine Nazareth and its Hinterland. Routledge. ISBN 9780367408237.
  • Dark, Ken (2018). The Waves of Time: Long-term Change and International Relations. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781474288309.
  • Dark, Ken (2001). Byzantine Pottery. Tempus. ISBN 9780752419428.
  • Dark, Ken (2000). Britain and the End of the Roman Empire. Tempus. ISBN 9780752414515.
  • Dark, Ken (1995). Theoretical Archaeology. Duckworth. ISBN 9780715626344.(Chinese and Japanese translations were published in 2004 and 2006)
  • Dark, Ken (1994). Civitas to Kingdom: British Political Continuity 300 - 800. Leicester University Press. ISBN 9780718514655.

Selected academic papers

  • "The earliest English church? The Chapel of St Pancras at St Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury, reconsidered", Journal of the British Archaeological Association 175, 2022, 13-36
  • "Royal burial in fifth–to seventh–century western Britain and Ireland", Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 150, 2021 (for 2020), 21-40
  • "Returning to the Caves of Mystery: texts, archaeology and the origins of Christian topography and pilgrimage in the Holy Land", Royal Anthropological Institute Henry Myers Lecture, Strata 38, 2020,103-124.
  • "Stones of the saints? Inscribed stones, monasticism and the evangelisation of western and northern Britain in the fifth and sixth centuries", The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 72, 2021, 239-58

References

Other sources

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