Thank you to Prof. Roger Matthews, who has decided to step down as our Academic Editor. He has edited our peer-reviewed journal: Anatolian Studies for over a decade!
We would like to congratulate our BIAA Honorary Patron: Bettany Hughes, who recently received an OBE from Princess Anne in her investiture. She received the award in the Queen's Birthday Honours 2019 for her services to history. We are honoured to have her wonderful support and promotion of Turkey's remarkable history.
On Thursday 10th October, Professor Ian Hodder - Director of the BIAA-supported Çatalhöyük Research Project - was awarded the Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) for services to archaeology and UK/Turkey relations. We caught up with Ian after his investiture to offer our congratulations and to ask him to reflect on his influential career as an archaeologist, as well as his 25 years' experience of working in Turkey.
Take a tour of the BIAA's Ankara-based facilities! See how The BIAA Wolfson Foundation Conference Room and other upgrades have dramatically improved the BIAA's activities during the last year.
The BIAA interviewed Dr. Olcay Muslu Gardner about how the Nahrein Network Visiting Scholarship Scheme helped her recent research into traditional music in the region of Sanlurfa, Turkey.
BIAA London Lecture: Conflict and Reconciliation: A Role for Turkish Civil Society Today?
10 December 2019 18:30 to 20:00 | London
A BIAA London lecture by Dr Leonidas Karakatsanis, former BIAA Assistant Director (2015-2019). For more than a decade after 1999, significant reconciliation efforts emerged amidst the troubled relations between Turkey and its neighbours Greece, Armenia and the Republic of Cyprus. Even the thorny Kurdish issue saw the launch of a short-lived peace process between 2013-2015. In all these processes…
This project, undertaken by Dr Benjamine Irvine (BIAA Postdoctoral Fellow 2018-20) examines human and animal mobility in 3rd millennium BC Anatolia and the interaction between movement and other…
This project aimed at fostering cross-discpilinary exchange for the study of the movement of people, things and ideas in Turkey and the wider region from the Paleolithic era until today.
The Çaltılar survey project was concerned with northern Lycia during the Bronze and Early Iron Ages, specifically its settlement history and material culture. …
This project aims to understand the appearance and trajectory of sedentary, cultivating, and herding communities in central Anatolia, investing also in Cultural heritage management.
The project aimed at examining the area between Mut and Karaman that was threatened with flooding by the construction of the Mut dam. …
Under the direction of Ian Hodder with multiple international teams working side by side the project aims to discover as much as possible about the Çatalhöyük site as a…
Beginning in 1993 the BIAA has collaborated in work at the significant Iron Age site of Kerkenes Dağ. …
Beginning in 1987, excavation work at Amorium (Afyonkarahisar Province) represents one of the longest-running British archaeological projects in Turkey. …
A regional project launched in 1982 with the aim of recording monuments, inscriptions and other identifiable surface remains of the Classical and Postclassical period.
Excavations, which took place between 1961 and 1970, contributed (along with Çatalhöyük) to a more complete stratigraphic sequence for the Konya Plain.
The Polatlı excavations were directed by Seton Lloyd and Nuri Gökçe in 1951. The work comprised a new investigation into third and second millennium stratigraphy in Anatolia.
This project, undertaken by Dr Gizem Tongo (BIAA Postdoctoral Fellow 2018-20) focuses on the Ottoman art world in the final years of the empire and explores how war and the occupation changed the…
This project asks how British literary and travel texts engage with the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire and the socio-political transformations of early Republican-era Turkey.
This research project aims at exploring the history and culture of Turkish football, with specific attention to the game’s role as a dynamic site of cultural heritage. …
This project focused on the ways in which the formation of the urban built environment responded to local climatic conditions in the Black Sea littoral region.
This project explores the relationship between Turkey and Britain from the First World War to Turkey’s entry into NATO in 1952.
This project explores how the wartime itineraries of hundreds of thousands of British military personnel produced new forms of colonial rule spanning the eastern Mediterranean and an imagined geograph…
This project aimed at fostering cross-discpilinary exchange for the study of the movement of people, things and ideas in Turkey and the wider region from the Paleolithic era until today.
Balkan Futures examined inter-regional development and cooperation in south-eastern Europe during a period of crisis rather than consolidation within the EU.
This project aimed at unearthing the role of civil society in the rapprochement process between Greece and Turkey (1974-2010).
The research project focused on a less-explored component of Islamic fashion, that is, on the design and production of commodified forms of religious appearance.
A project exploring the relations between Ottoman and early Republican Turkey and the southeast Asian Muslim states.
This project aims to increase knowledge, capacity and awareness regarding the protection of Turkey's archaeological assets.
Part of the research arm of the BIAA’s ongoing cultural heritage management umbrella project, Living Amid the Ruins (LAR) offers an innovative approach to the use of archaeological heritage in s…
This project builds on the results of the Pisidia Archaeological Survey Project and focuses on the creation of a regional cultural heritage management plan for Pisidia.
A joint CHM project (BIAA & Hacettepe University) that built on results of the Aspendos Archaeological Project.
This project aims to understand the appearance and trajectory of sedentary, cultivating, and herding communities in central Anatolia, investing also in Cultural heritage management.
A project for studying Çatalhöyük and the nearby village of Küçükköy as research sites combining anthropology and archaeology.
In 1963 and 1964 May Hamilton and Colin Beattie travelled across Anatolia in an exploration of the Turkish carpet industry.
Through this project, active between 1957 and 1962, paintings, frescoes, and other architectural elements were cleaned, restored, and preserved.