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Education

Laurea, University of Catania, 1997

Bio

Anna Gallone is a Roman archaeologist whose research focuses on the urban developments in Tyrrhenian Italy from the 1st millennium BCE and on the Romanization of central and southern Italy (4th-1st century BCE). She started teaching at JCU in 2024. Her research interests also focus on the city of Rome and its transformation and landscape changes from the first human occupation to the Imperial period. Anna Gallone has been teaching Roman archaeology courses since 2001.

As an archaeologist with over 25 years of experience, she has been involved in the survey, excavation, and publication of many archaeological sites in Rome, including the Auditorium villa, the Palatine Hill, the Imperial forums, and the Testaccio district. As a field archeologist, she has also been teaching archeological methods and techniques in a number of North American and European summer schools (UNC at Chapel Hill,  Birkbeck College, University of London, University of Durham, Queen's University) on different central and southern Italian sites.

Since 2007, Anna Gallone has been the field director of the Gabii Project, a large-scale archaeological initiative promoted by the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology (University of Michigan) and the University of Missouri. She is the 2024 recipient of the AIA award for outstanding work in digital archaeology as editor of the volume A Cemetery and Quarry from Imperial Gabii. In 2025, she was nominated Corresponding Member of the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA).
Visit Professor Gallone's profile on Academia.edu

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