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  1. Jacquetta Hawkes OBE FBA (5 August 1910 – 18 March 1996) was an English archaeologist and writer. She was the first woman to study the Archaeology & Anthropology degree course at the University of Cambridge.

  2. Jassie Jacquetta Hawkes (Cambridge, 5 de agosto de 1910 – 18 de marzo de 1996) fue una arqueóloga y escritora británica. Biografía [ editar ] Nombrada al nacer como Jessie Jacquetta Hopkins , la hija del ganador del Premio Nobel Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins contrajo primeras nupcias con Christopher Hawkes , un ayudante por ese ...

  3. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › jacquetta-hawkesJacquetta Hawkes _ AcademiaLab

    Jacquetta Hawkes FSA OBE (5 de agosto de 1910 - 18 marzo de 1996) fue un arqueólogo y escritor inglés. Fue la primera mujer en estudiar Arqueología & Licenciatura en Antropología en la Universidad de Cambridge.

  4. 11 de may. de 2012 · A flamboyant history of Planet England and a sensorily supercharged call to get back to the land. Robert Macfarlane. Fri 11 May 2012 17.55 EDT. Jacquetta Hawkes's extraordinary book A Land,...

  5. 26 de oct. de 2020 · Basic Biographical Information. Jessie Jacquetta Hawkes (nee Hopkins) also known as Jacquetta Priestley was born on August 5, 1910, in Cambridge, UK. Her father was the Nobel prize-winning biochemist and Trinity don, Frederick Gowland Hopkins, and her mother, Jessie Ann, introduced her to museums.

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  6. of Jacquetta Hawkes's heightened, cosmological sense of self, of her non-conformist, sensual, even primal, appreciation of geological processes in deep time, and through those, of a tale of human history configured according to a radical interpretation of the archaeological and landscape record.2

  7. Jacquetta Hawkes was an English archaeologist and writer. She was the first woman to study the Archaeology & Anthropology degree course at the University of Cambridge. A specialist in prehistoric archaeology, she excavated Neanderthal remains at the Palaeolithic site of Mount Carmel with Yusra and Dorothy Garrod.