- Timothy W. Potter
Timothy William Potter (born 1944; died January 2000) was a prominent
archaeologist of ancientItaly , as well as ofRoman Britain , best known for his focus onlandscape archaeology .Potter studied at
Cambridge , receiving his B.A. from Trinity College (1966) and his Ph.D. in 1974; his Ph.D. thesis was entitled "Archaeological Topography of Central and Southern Ager Faliscus". In the 1980s Potter excavated atStonea , a Roman settlement in the fens ofCambridgeshire .Potter was a student of
John Bryan Ward-Perkins and a member of theSouth Etruria Survey conducted by theBritish School at Rome . As part of the survey Potter worked on the "Ager Faliscus " leading to two influential books, "A Faliscan Town in South Etruria: Excavations at Narce 1966-71" (1976) and "The changing landscape of South Etruria" (1979). Potter also authored a popular course textbook entitled "Roman Italy" (1987). The survey also led to his important excavations atMonte Gelato (1986-1990) andNarce (1966-1971).Potter taught at the University of Lancaster (1973-1978) where he instituted a new archaeology program. In 1978 he moved to the
British Museum and their department of Prehistoric and Romano-British Antiquities, serving as assistant keeper from 1978 to 1995 and keeper from 1995 until his death.Bibliography
*"Excavations in the Medieval Centre of Mazzano Romano", in "Papers of the British School at Rome" 40, p.135-45 (1972).
*"A Faliscan Town in South Etruria: Excavations at Narce 1966-71" (1976).
* "Romans in north-west England : excavations at the Roman forts of Ravenglass, Watercrook and Bownes" (1979).
*"The Changing Landscapes of Southern Etruria" (1979).
* "Una stipe votiva da Ponte di Nona" (1989).
* "Towns in late antiquity" (1995).
* and R. Jackson. "Excavations at Stonea, Cambridgeshire, 1980-1985" (1996).
* and A. King. "Excavation of the mola di Monte Gelato: a Roman and Medieval settlement in South Etruria" (1997).
* and Catherine Johns. "Roman Britain" (2002).References
* Necrology by
Stephen L. Dyson in "American Journal of Archaeology" 104.3 (July 2000) 589-90.
* Necrology by Federico Marazzi in "Archeologia Medievale" 27 (2000) 435-8.
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