Sabine Ladstätter

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sabine Ladstätter (born November 22, 1968 in Klagenfurt ; née Schretter ) is an Austrian classical archaeologist . She has been the director of the Austrian Archaeological Institute (ÖAI) since October 1st, 2009 .

life and work

Sabine Ladstätter, daughter of the politician Fritz Schretter , grew up in Tainach . After attending grammar school in Völkermarkt , she completed a diploma in Classical Archeology and Ancient History and Classical Studies from 1986 to 1992 at the University of Graz . In 1992 she obtained her degree in Mag. Phil. with the work The Greek Coin Collection of the Institute for Ancient History at the Karl-Franzens University Graz and took over the local excavation management of the University of Vienna on the Hemmaberg from 1992 to 1998 , whose finds she processed from 1993 to 1995. Ladstätter completed her doctoral studies at the University of Vienna from 1993 to 1997 with study visits in 1994 within the framework of scholarships in Ljubljana and Athens. In the period from 1994 to 1996 she took a supplementary course in prehistory and early history at the University of Vienna.

In 1997, she was with the work of the Mediterraneum provincia Slaborum under the supervision of Franz Glaser and Friedrich Krinzinger doctorate . In 1993 Ladstätter directed an emergency excavation in Feldkirchen and was a research assistant for the Ephesos project from 1995 to 1997 and worked on the ceramic finds from the hillside house 2. Since 1996, she has participated in the excavations in Ephesus annually (directed by Stefan Karwiese and Friedrich Krinzinger), 1996 until 2002 and 2004 she led the excavation in hillside house 2 in Ephesus.

In 1997/98 she was a research assistant at the Archeology Research Center of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (ÖAW), processed the late antique finds from the Carnuntum legionary camp and was a research assistant at the Archeology Research Center and the Institute for Cultural History of Antiquity from 1998 to 2007 ÖAW (coordination and implementation of ceramic research in Ephesus as well as publication of the hillside house 2).

From 2001 to 2007, Ladstätter was deputy managing director of the Institute for the Cultural History of Antiquity at the Academy. From 2007 she was a scientific employee of the OeAI as deputy head and since April 2010 head of the Ephesus excavation.

Science Minister Johannes Hahn appointed Ladstätter as the new director of the Austrian Archaeological Institute (OeAI), founded in 1898, on October 1, 2009, and thus succeeded Johannes Koder , who had headed the institute on an interim basis since 2007. Ladstätter is the first woman to head the OeAI.

Ladstätter has worked as a lecturer at the University of Vienna since 2001, where she qualified as a lecturer in Classical Archeology in 2007 with her thesis Studies on Ephesian Ceramics from Late Hellenistic to Late Antique Period .

Ladstätter has dealt in particular with the ancient metropolis of Ephesus and in particular with the ceramic finds and has often devoted himself to numismatic and economic-historical issues. Further research projects included the processing of late Hellenistic and Roman amphorae from Ephesus from 2001 to 2004, the management of the project relief cups and Ephesus lamps from Ephesus from 2002 to 2006 and the processing of the ceramics of the Jupiter Dolichenus shrine in Doliche in 2003 (management Engelbert Winter , research center Asia Minor at the University of Münster). Since 2005 Ladstätter has been working on Ptolemaic-Hellenistic ceramics in Aswan / Upper Egypt (cooperation with the Swiss Institute for Egyptian Building Research and Antiquity in Cairo).

Ladstätter has been a corresponding member of the German Archaeological Institute since 2008 .

Fonts

Print publications

  • The material culture of late antiquity in the Eastern Alps. A case study using the example of the western double church complex on the Hemmaberg (MPK Volume 35) , 2000.
  • with Martin Steskal: Preliminary report on the building history of the Vediusgymnasium in Ephesos , in: Annual Books of the Austrian Archaeological Institute Volume 73 , Vienna 2004.
  • with Verena Gassner and Sonja Jilek: On the edge of the empire: The Romans in Austria , Ueberreuter, Vienna 2002, ISBN 3-8000-3772-6 .
  • Bones, stones, shards. Adventure archeology. Shards tell a story , Residenz Verlag, St. Pölten 2013, ISBN 9783701733163 .
  • with Michaela Binder: The Saint from Hemmaberg. Cold case of a relic . Verlag Holzhausen, Vienna 2018, ISBN 978-3-903207-19-6 .

Internet publications

  • Bibliography on the early Christian pilgrim sanctuary and the late antique settlement on the Hemmaberg / Carinthia , Forum Archaeologiae 19, VI, 2001 [1] .
  • with Andreas Pülz: Early Christian ampoules from the collection of the Institute for Classical Archeology in Vienna , Forum Archaeologiae 21, XII, 2001 [2] .

Awards

Individual evidence

  1. An archaeologist with millions of "students" on ORF on January 9, 2012, accessed on January 9, 2012
  2. Federal Ministry of Science and Research Press and News of January 27, 2014: Mitterlehner congratulates the winners of the science book of the year election , accessed on February 7, 2014

Web links