Harriet Crawford | |
---|---|
Born | 1937 |
Scientific career | |
Fields | archaeology |
Institutions | UCL Institute of Archaeology |
Harriet Elizabeth Walston Crawford, Lady Swinnerton-Dyer (born 1937 [1]) is a British archaeologist. She is Reader Emerita at the UCL Institute of Archaeology and a senior fellow at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge.
Harriet Crawford Browne was born in 1937, [1] the elder daughter of the judge Sir Patrick Browne [2] and Evelyn Sophie Alexandra Walston.[ citation needed]
In 1983 she married the mathematician Peter Swinnerton-Dyer. [3] [4]
Ruth Whitehouse, the Institute of Archaeology's first woman professor, has commented that Crawford "definitely should have been" made professor there. [5] After Crawford's retirement, the UCL Institute of Archaeology gave her the title of Reader Emerita, [6] and more recently she has also been an Honorary Visiting Professor at the Institute. [7]
Harriet Crawford | |
---|---|
Born | 1937 |
Scientific career | |
Fields | archaeology |
Institutions | UCL Institute of Archaeology |
Harriet Elizabeth Walston Crawford, Lady Swinnerton-Dyer (born 1937 [1]) is a British archaeologist. She is Reader Emerita at the UCL Institute of Archaeology and a senior fellow at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge.
Harriet Crawford Browne was born in 1937, [1] the elder daughter of the judge Sir Patrick Browne [2] and Evelyn Sophie Alexandra Walston.[ citation needed]
In 1983 she married the mathematician Peter Swinnerton-Dyer. [3] [4]
Ruth Whitehouse, the Institute of Archaeology's first woman professor, has commented that Crawford "definitely should have been" made professor there. [5] After Crawford's retirement, the UCL Institute of Archaeology gave her the title of Reader Emerita, [6] and more recently she has also been an Honorary Visiting Professor at the Institute. [7]