Difference between revisions of "Skinner H D"

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(Henry (Harry) Devenish Skinner 1886-1978)
(Henry (Harry) Devenish Skinner 1886-1978)
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Skinner was trained as an anthropologist in Britain, lectured in anthropology at Otago University and was for a long period the Director of the Otago Musuem. Notable students of his undergraduate course include [[Duff Roger|Roger Duff]], Ron Scarlett and [[Eyles Jim|Jim Eyles]].
 
Skinner was trained as an anthropologist in Britain, lectured in anthropology at Otago University and was for a long period the Director of the Otago Musuem. Notable students of his undergraduate course include [[Duff Roger|Roger Duff]], Ron Scarlett and [[Eyles Jim|Jim Eyles]].
  
Skinner's main interest was material culture and he published many papers on aspects of this. He undertook fieldwork in the Chatham Islands. A collector from his youth he encouraged amateurs where their finds were likley to find their way to the Museum. In his time many remarkable private collecitons were aquired by the Museum. Skinner particularly encouraged Teviotdale in his Otago excavations, but he had only a minor personal role in the excavations of the day. Leach (1972) gives a history of Otago archaeology including the Skinner era.
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Skinner's main interest was material culture and he published many papers on aspects of this. He undertook fieldwork in the Chatham Islands. A collector from his youth he encouraged amateurs where their finds were likley to find their way to the Museum. In his time many remarkable private collections were aquired by the Museum. Skinner particularly encouraged Teviotdale in his Otago excavations, but he had only a minor personal role in the excavations of the day. Leach (1972) gives a history of Otago archaeology including the Skinner era.
  
 
Skinner was the first president of the [[NZAA|New Zealand Archaeological Association]].
 
Skinner was the first president of the [[NZAA|New Zealand Archaeological Association]].
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The Royal Society operates a Skinner Fund which operates "to promote the study of the history, art, culture, physical and social anthropology of the Maori and other Polynesian peoples, particularly through the recording, survey, excavation and scientific study of prehistoric and historic sites in New Zealand and the islands of the South-west Pacific." [http://www.rsnz.org/funding/skinner/ Link]  
 
The Royal Society operates a Skinner Fund which operates "to promote the study of the history, art, culture, physical and social anthropology of the Maori and other Polynesian peoples, particularly through the recording, survey, excavation and scientific study of prehistoric and historic sites in New Zealand and the islands of the South-west Pacific." [http://www.rsnz.org/funding/skinner/ Link]  
  
Leach, H M 1971 A Hundred Years of Otago Archaeology: A Critical Review. '''Records of the Otago Museum''' Anthropology Number 6.
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Leach, H M 1972 A Hundred Years of Otago Archaeology: A Critical Review. '''Records of the Otago Museum''' Anthropology Number 6.
  
 
[[Category:Archaeologists]]
 
[[Category:Archaeologists]]

Revision as of 14:43, 17 January 2008

Henry (Harry) Devenish Skinner 1886-1978

Skinner was trained as an anthropologist in Britain, lectured in anthropology at Otago University and was for a long period the Director of the Otago Musuem. Notable students of his undergraduate course include Roger Duff, Ron Scarlett and Jim Eyles.

Skinner's main interest was material culture and he published many papers on aspects of this. He undertook fieldwork in the Chatham Islands. A collector from his youth he encouraged amateurs where their finds were likley to find their way to the Museum. In his time many remarkable private collections were aquired by the Museum. Skinner particularly encouraged Teviotdale in his Otago excavations, but he had only a minor personal role in the excavations of the day. Leach (1972) gives a history of Otago archaeology including the Skinner era.

Skinner was the first president of the New Zealand Archaeological Association.

See Atholl Anderson's article on Skinner in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. DNZB

Festschrift: 1959 Anthropology in the South Seas Eds. J D Freeman and W R Geddes, Thomas Avery and Sons, New Plymouth. Freeman gives a memoir on Skinner as an introduction to the volume.

Roger Fyfe, 1989, An anthropologist at war, in Saying so doesn't make it so, Papers in honour of B Foss Leach, Edited D G Sutton, New Zealand Archaeological Association Monograph No. 17, - gives an account of his war service at Gallipoli.

Peter Gathercole's introductory chapter in H.D.Skinner, 1974, Comparitively speaking, Editors Peter Gathercole, Foss Leach and Helen Leach, University of Otago Press, is a longer appreciation. Many of Skinner's papers are reprinted in that volume.

Obituary: Peter Gathercole 1978 Journal of the Polynesian Society 87:109-110.

The Royal Society operates a Skinner Fund which operates "to promote the study of the history, art, culture, physical and social anthropology of the Maori and other Polynesian peoples, particularly through the recording, survey, excavation and scientific study of prehistoric and historic sites in New Zealand and the islands of the South-west Pacific." Link

Leach, H M 1972 A Hundred Years of Otago Archaeology: A Critical Review. Records of the Otago Museum Anthropology Number 6.