Siri Sande Explained

Siri Sande (born 27 September 1943) is a Professor Emerita of Archaeology. She specialises in Roman material culture, specifically late antique culture and visual art.

Education

Sande studied classical archaeology, art history, and classical languages at the University of Oslo. In 1972, the University of Oslo awarded her an MA in classical archaeology. Her MA dissertation focused on Roman portraits in the sixth century CE.[1]

Career

From 1975, Sande was assistant professor in classical archaeology at the University of Oslo, and was Professor from 1996. Sande contributed to the excavation of the Temple to Castor and Pollux in the Roman Forum in Rome, 1983–9.[2] She was deputy director of the Norwegian Institute in Rome 1983–1990. She became Director of the Institute 2003–07.

Sande is the daughter of the writer Jakob Sande (1906–1967).

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 24 January 2024 . Siri Sande turns 80! .
  2. Book: Bilde . Pia Guldager . The Temple of Castor and Pollux Ii,1: The Finds . Poulsen . Birte . 2008 . L'ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER . 978-88-8265-463-4 . en.