- Stuart Piggott
Stuart Ernest Piggott CBE (
28 May ,1910 –23 September ,1996 ) was a Britisharchaeologist most well known for his work on prehistoricWessex .Born in
Petersfield, Hampshire , Piggott was educated atChurcher's College and on leaving school in 1927 took up a post as assistant atReading Museum where he developed an expertise inNeolithic pottery.In 1928 he was joined the
Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales and spent the next 5 years producing a revolutionary study of the site ofButser Hill , near Petersfield. He also worked with Eliot and Cecil Curwen on their excavations atThe Trundle causewayed enclosure inSussex .In the 1930s he began working for
Alexander Keiller , an amateur archaeologist who funded his work from the profits of his Dundeemarmalade business. The two dug numerous sites in Wessex includingAvebury andKennet Avenue . In 1933, he joined his friendGrahame Clark in writing the highly significant, ‘The age of the British flint mines’, ("Antiquity",1933); the resultant controversy brought about the founding of thePrehistoric Society . Still without any formal archaeological qualification, Piggott enrolled atMortimer Wheeler 'sInstitute of Archaeology , taking his diploma in 1936 and where he also met his wife, Peggy (Margaret Guido). In 1937 he published another seminal paper, "The early Bronze Age in Wessex" and with his wife went on in June 1939 to join the burial chamber excavations atSutton Hoo at the invitation ofCharles Phillips .During the
Second World War Piggott worked as an air photo interpreter and was posted toIndia where he spent time studying the archaeology of the sub-continent, eventually leading him to write the books "Some Ancient Cities of India" (1946) and "Prehistoric India" (1950). These experiences provided him with a valuable external view of European prehistory, which was to prove useful on his return to Britain.After the war he went to Oxford studying the work of
William Stukeley but in 1946 was soon offered the Abercromby Chair in archaeology atEdinburgh University succeedingVere Gordon Childe . Piggott succeeded in making Edinburgh an archaeology department of international standing. He continued to publish widely including "Neolithic Cultures of the British Isles" (1954) which was considered highly influential untilradiocarbon dating tests did not match its chronology. Piggott said that radiocarbon dating was "archaeologically unacceptable", because every other shred of evidence pointed towards his dates being correct. "Ancient Europe" (1965), however remained a popular survey of Old World prehistory for more than twenty years, demonstrating his view of the solidarity and continuity of the past in Europe. In 1956 his childless marriage ended.In 1958 Piggott published a survey of Scottish prehistory, "Scotland before History" and, in 1959 one of a popular introductory volume, "Approach to Archaeology". He was president of the Prehistoric Society from 1960 to 1963, then president of the
Society of Antiquaries of Scotland from 1963 to 1967, then president of theCouncil for British Archaeology from 1967 to 1970, and a trustee of theBritish Museum between 1968 and 1974). In 1963, he produced a thorough analysis of theBeaker culture in Britain, published as part of aFestschrift dedicated toCyril Fox . Piggott's interest in the early history of the practice of archaeology led to him writing "The Druids" in 1968 whilst other books included "Prehistoric Societies" (with Grahame Clark), "The Earliest Wheeled Transport" (1983), followed by its sequel Wagon, Chariot and Carriage (1992) . His final book was "Ancient Britain and the Antiquarian Imagination" (1989).He received the CBE in 1972, and was awarded numerous academic awards from scholarly institutions in Britain and abroad. He retired from the Abercrombie Chair in 1977 and awarded the gold medal of the
Society of Antiquaries of London in 1983 and the Grahame Clark medal of theBritish Academy in 1992. He died of a heart attack at his home nearWantage inBerkshire on23 September 1996 and his remains were cremated on30 September atOxford crematoriumSites he excavated (often with Richard Atkinson) included:
*
Cairnpapple Hill inWest Lothian
*Wayland's Smithy inOxfordshire
*West Kennet Long Barrow andStonehenge inWiltshire Bibliography
* Bradley, R. " [http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba19/ba19obit.html Obituary: Stuart Piggott] ", "British Archaeology", No. 19, November 1996.
* Daniel, Glyn Edmund; Chippindale, Christopher. "The Pastmasters: Eleven Modern Pioneers of Archaeology: V. Gordon Childe, Stuart Piggott, Charles Phillips, Christopher Hawkes, Seton Lloyd, Robert J. Braidwood, Gordon R. Willey, C.J. Becker, Sigfried J. De Laet, J. Desmond Clark, D.J. Mulvaney". New York: Thames and Hudson, 1989 (hardcover, ISBN 0500050511).
* Mercer, R. "Piggott, Stuart Ernest (1910–1996)", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford University Press, 2004.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.