Klaus Kell

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Klaus Wilhelm Maria Kell (* 1959 in Dillingen / Saar ) is a German classical and Roman provincial archaeologist .

Klaus Kell studied classical archeology, art history and ancient history in Saarbrücken and Bonn and received his doctorate in 1985 at the University of Saarland in Saarbrücken with a thesis on the study of form in late and post-Hellenistic groups . For his work he was awarded the travel grant of the German Archaeological Institute , with the help of which he was able to travel to the Mediterranean in 1985/86 . This was followed by a year and a half employment with the city of Dillingen , since 1988 he has been employed by the city of Homburg . Since 1990 he has headed the Department of City History and Monument Preservation as well as the City Archives and, since 1992, the Roman Museum Schwarzenacker . The museum is being expanded significantly over a longer period of time under Kells leadership. Since June 2010 he has also been an honorary professor at the Institute for Classical Archeology at Saarland University. Kell is a member of the Commission for Saarland State History , the State Monument Council and the Advisory Board of the Siebenpfeiffer Foundation .

Fonts

  • Investigations into the form of late and post-Hellenistic groups , Saarbrücker Druckerei and Verlag, Saarbrücken 1988, ISBN 3-925036-26-1 (Saarbrücker Studies on Archeology and Ancient History, Volume 2)
  • The Roman cemetery of Dillingen-Lachten (Kr. Saarlouis). Catalog , Staatliches Konservatoramt, Saarbrücken 1994, ISBN 3-927856-04-5 (Report of the State Preservation of Monuments in Saarland. Department of Soil Monument Preservation, Supplement 3)
  • The Roman open-air museum Homburg-Schwarzenacker , Ermer, Homburg 1996, ISBN 3-924653-20-8
  • with Charlotte Glück-Christmann : Painting at the Pfalz-Zweibrücker Hof in the 18th century. Catalog of the exhibitions Homburg and Zweibrücken , Römermuseum Homburg-Schwarzenacker / Stadtmuseum Zweibrücken, Homburg / Zweibrücken 2006, ISBN 978-3-00-018686-8
  • Roman Museum Schwarzenacker, Homburg , Schnell + Steiner, Regensburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-7954-6745-6 (Small Art Guide, number 2692)

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