Bettina Jungklaus

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Bettina Jungklaus (born in Milan in 1965 ) is a German anthropologist and osteologist .

Life

Bettina Jungklaus graduated from the Bettina von Arnim Oberschule in Berlin in 1985 . 1986–1994 she studied biology with a focus on anthropology at the Free University of Berlin , with her thesis “The skeletons from Staaken - an example of a village population aged 14-18. Century ".

From 1994 she worked as a freelance anthropologist. From 1995 to 2008 Bettina Jungklaus taught at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Greifswald . At the same time, she was a research assistant at the Institute for Biology in the Human Biology and Anthropology group at the Free University of Berlin from 1999 to 2004. In 2003 the project of the German Research FoundationTell Schech Hamad ” enabled her to do a two-month research stay in Syria. From 2007 to 2011, Bettina Jungklaus worked as a scientist at the Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and in the State Archaeological Museum , among other things in the project funded by the German Research Foundation "Investigations into living conditions, settlement dynamics and human nutrition in medieval rural settlements in Brandenburg", which ran from May 2013 to April 2014 was extended. Bettina Jungklaus obtained her doctoral degree at the Free University of Berlin in 2009 with the thesis "The disease burden of the medieval and early modern child population in Tasdorf (Ldk. Märkisch-Oderland) - Results of the osteological-paleopathological investigations" . In 2012 she worked for five months as a scientist at the State Office for Culture and Monument Preservation in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania . She was a lecturer at the Berlin University of Applied Sciences and the University of Potsdam . From October to December 2015, Bettina Jungklaus worked on the research project: "Medieval space and population" at the Humboldt University Berlin . She examined the skeletons from Petrikirchplatz in Berlin using the methods of the Museum of London. From August to December 2016 she worked as an anthropologist at the State Office for Culture and Monument Preservation Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.

Bettina Jungklaus runs a freelance office for anthropological-archaeological research in Berlin. She examined numerous burial grounds and cemeteries in the Berlin, Brandenburg, Lower Saxony and Franconia area.

Publications

  • What skeleton finds from the Thomaskirchhof tell about everyday life in the Middle Ages . In: Volker Rodekamp , Regina Smolnik (Hrsg.): 1015. Leipzig from the beginning: Accompanying volume for the exhibition of the City History Museum Leipzig May 20 - October 25, 2015 . Leipzig 2015, ISBN 978-3-910034-76-1 , pp. 131-137 .
  • Anthropological investigations on the skeleton finds from the Stralsund Dominican monastery . In: Archaeological Society for Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (Hrsg.): Archaeological reports from Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania . tape 20 , 2013, ISSN  0946-512X , p. 166-183 .
  • A contribution to the nutrition of the Western Slavs - results of paleodontological investigations on skeletons from the 10th to 13th centuries. from northeast Germany . In: Felix Biermann (Ed.): Social groups and societal structures in the West Slavic region: Contributions of the section on Slavic early history of the 20th annual conference of the Central and East German Association for Antiquity Research in Brandenburg (Havel), April 16-18, 2012 . Langenweißbach 2013, ISBN 978-3-941171-85-5 , p. 203-210 .
  • Social structure of the late medieval city population as reflected in the burial places and anthropological studies . In: Communications of the German Society for Archeology of the Middle Ages and Modern Times . tape 25 , 2013, ISSN  1619-1439 , pp. 105–116 ( uni-heidelberg.de [PDF]).
  • "Dead fire" and other incendiary rites in late Slavic body graves in northeast Germany . In: Immo Heske (Ed.): "Landscape, Settlement and Settlement": archaeological studies in a northern European context; Festschrift for Karl-Heinz Willroth on his 65th birthday . Neumünster 2013, ISBN 978-3-529-01533-5 , p. 491-500 .
  • "Save us from want and famine ..- A contribution to the reconstruction of diet in Brandenburg during the high medieval to early modern time . In: Gisela Grupe (ed.): Morphological and biomolecular analyzes of bones and teeth: unveiling past diet, health, and environmental parameters . Rahden 2011, ISBN 978-3-89646-624-2 , pp. 67-86 .
  • Deficiency diseases of child skeletons in the Middle Ages and early modern times in Brandenburg . In: Ulrich Klein (Ed.): Kitchen, Cooking, Nutrition: Archeology, Building Research, Natural Sciences; Schwäbisch Hall conference, April 6-8, 2006 . Paderborn 2007, p. 287-290 .
  • Old town Brandenburg an der Havel, Mühlentorstraße 16: Kietzer or sick? A cemetery from the time the city was founded . In: Publications on Brandenburg State Archeology . tape 38 . Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum, Wünsdorf 2004, OCLC 73659536 , p. 155-164 .
  • Excavations in Mühlentorstraße 16 in Brandenburg's old town - discoveries of a cemetery from the time the city was founded. In: Annual report on the Historic Association of Brandenburg a. H. Historischer Verein Brandenburg (Havel), Brandenburg an der Havel 2001, OCLC 183369573 , p. 65-67 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Working group Sepulchral Culture of Modern Times (ar.se.n.) - About us. In: arsen-berlin.de. Retrieved June 3, 2017 .
  2. Bettina Jungklaus: The disease burden of the medieval and early modern child population of Tasdorf (Ldk. Märkisch-Oderland). Results of the osteological - paleopathological examinations . Dissertation to obtain the academic degree of Doctor of Natural Sciences (Dr. rer. Nat.) Submitted in the Department of Biology, Chemistry, Pharmacy at the Free University of Berlin. Berlin 2010 ( fu-berlin.de [PDF; 10.0 MB ]).
  3. Anthropology Office Dr. Bettina Jungklaus - About me. In: anthropologie-jungklaus.de. Retrieved June 3, 2017 .