Néhémie Strupler
Néhémie Strupler did his PhD in Archaeology jointly at the Universityof Strasbourg and at the University of Münster. Before coming to Bern, Néhémie worked at the German Archaeological Institute in Istanbul, was a pre-doctoralfellow at the French Institute of Anatolian Studies and a post-doctoral fellowat ANAMED in Istanbul. His dissertation, ‘The Lower City of Boğazköy during the Second Millennium BC’, examined the evolution of social patterns of the domestic quarters, at the critical moment when the site became the political capital of the Hittites. Néhémie is an Open Science and Free Software advocate and he is enthusiastic about developing theory and methods to explore archaeological data through open and reproducible standards.
Research Project
SCATTER: The Scaling Territories Project. How Bronze Age inhabitants in Anatolia redefined their territories within expanding centralised power? On the traces of human occupation and territorial expansion (claims)
Research Foci
Cityscape and Landscape in Archaeology | Human-Environment Interaction | Digital Humanities | Prehistoric and Bronze Age Anatolian Archaeology | Pedestrian Archaeological Survey | Remote Sensing | Geographic Information Systems (GIS) | Quantitative Method, Statistic and Reproducibility