Kathleen Mary Kenyon

1906-1978

Kathleen Mary Kenyon was the eldest daughter born January 5, 1906 to Sir Frederic Kenyon, Director of the British Museum. Jericho, one of the earliest continuous settlements in the world, was excavated by Kenyon

She attended Somerville College at Oxford Universityand later became the first female president of the Oxford Archeological Society. She graduated in 1929 and joined Gertrude Caton–Thomson excavating the ruins at Zimbabwe in Southern Rhodesia. When she returned from Zimbabwe she joined the staff of Sir Mortimer Wheeler. She traveled to Verulamium, a city north of London and studied Wheeler’s method of stratigraphic excavation, which involves excavating by trenches and requires careful observations, interpretation, and recording throughout the excavation.

While World War II raged, her work was confined to England. She contributed to the founding of the University of London Institute of Archeology. Kenyon was a lecturer in Palestinian Archeology and actively combined seminar and classroom instruction with actual work in the field. She conducted excavations at Sutton Walls in England and Sabratha in Italy and served as the first Secretary and as acting Director during these war years. She was associated with the Institute from 1935 to 1962.

Text Box: Human skull from the Jericho excavations In 1951 Kenyon became Honorary Director of the British School of Archeology in Jerusalem. She found evidence that pushed back the occupation of the mound at Jericho from the Bronze Age and Neolithic to the Natufian culture at the end of the Ice Age (10,000 – 9,000 BC). Among the agricultural and pottery finds were human skulls. Features were modeled with plaster and the eye sockets inset with shells. Kenyon also excavated Jerusalem, but this site did not attract much attention.

From 1962 to until her retirement in 1973, Kathleen Kenyon served as principal at St. Hugh’s College in Oxford. In 1973, because of her many accomplishments and contributions, Queen Elizabeth II named Kathleen Mary Kenyon DBE (Dame of the Order of the British Empire), the female version of knighthood. Dame Kathleen Kenyon then concentrated on publishing her work on Jericho and Jerusalem.Many works were edited and published after her death in 1978.

Written Works:

The Buildings of Samaria

Excavations at Jericho Vol. 1 and 2

Archaeology in the Holy Land

Beginnings in Archaeology

Digging up Jericho

Digging up Jerusalem

Jerusalem-Excavating 3000 years of History

Amorites and Canaanites

Recent Archaeology

References:

Kenyon, Dame Kathleen (Mary) Encyclopedia Britannica Online http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9045128?&query=kathleenkenyon

Kathleen Mary Kenyonhttp://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/4770/index.html

The Cambridge Illustrated History of Archaeology, Edited by Paul G. Bahn (Cambridge University Press, 1996) pages 248-250 Anne Ward, Adventures in Archaeology (Larousse and Co, Inc., 1977) pages 109-121

Robert Silverberg, Frontiers in Archeology (Chilton Books, 1966) pages 7-25

Cheryl Dawley