Of routes and roots. Insights from Neolithic Mobility and Migration
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2 March 2026
10:00 AM
Venue: M12, Faculty of Arts or online
Daniela Hofmann is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Bergen, Norway, where she specializes in the European Neolithic (mid-6th to mid-3rd millennium BCE). She completed her undergraduate and PhD studies at Cardiff University (2006), and prior to her Bergen appointment held positions at Cardiff University, the University of Oxford, and Hamburg University.
Hofmann's research combines close material analysis with theoretical approaches and scientific techniques to investigate identity, boundary marking, and culture change across multiple scales. Her recent work particularly emphasizes migration and social inequality in prehistoric contexts, tracing how local-level material culture impacts larger-scale, long-term processes. She employs diverse evidence including aDNA and isotope data, mortuary and ritual practices, human representations, artefact patterning, and domestic and monumental architecture.
Her current research includes leading interdisciplinary projects on Neolithic migration narratives around the North Sea (co-directed with Rune Iversen and Vicki Cummings, funded by the Independent Research Fund Denmark), and investigating culture change and hierarchy through the Bavarian Münchshöfen enclosure site of Riedling (DFG-funded). She also co-led a Centre for Advanced Study project in Oslo on archaeological migration narratives and the introduction of farming in southern Norway.
Abstract
Largely thanks to new bioarchaeological methods, mobility and migration have returned to archaeological interpretation. But what has also returned is the fear of writing simplistic and outdated narratives about mobile groups. In this brief lecture, we look at selected case studies from across Neolithic Europe (amongst them the Linearbandkeramik, the Alpine Foreland, and the Neolithisation of Norway) to discuss how being mobile may have shaped past identities, and how we can present these to the public today.
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