Aurélia Masson-Berghoff Explained

Aurélia Masson-Berghoff is a French Egyptologist and exhibition curator in the department of ancient Egypt and Sudan at the British Museum.

Early life

Aurélia Masson-Berghoff was an archaeologist at the Centre Franco-Egyptien d'Etude des Temples de Karnak from 2000 to 2007. She obtained her PhD from the University of Paris IV Sorbonne in 2008 for a dissertation on the "Priests' Quarter" in the temenos of Amun at Karnak.[1]

Career

Masson-Berghoff was a lecturer at the University of Cambridge and a post-doctoral fellow at the Université Libre de Bruxelles where she participated in research on "Pottery in Ancient Societies: Production, distribution and uses". She joined the British Museum in 2012 as the project curator of the Naukratis project, in which capacity she was responsible for recording and analysing Egyptian material from the early excavations there.[1]

In 2015–2016, Masson-Berghoff is the lead curator for Sunken Cities: Egypt's Lost World, which featured materials from the sunken cities of Thônis–Heracleion and Canopus in Aboukir Bay, Egypt, discovered by Franck Goddio.[1] [2]

She is a research associate at the Université Libre de Bruxelles and the University of Cambridge.[1]

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.britishmuseum.org/about_us/departments/staff/ancient_egypt_and_sudan/aurelia_masson-berghoff.aspx Aurélia Masson-Berghoff.
  2. http://www.franckgoddio.org/projects/sunken-civilizations/heracleion.html Thonis-Heracleion: From Legend to Reality.