Linda Hulin’s interests centre upon the materiality of interregional contact across the eastern Mediterranean, and particularly the Levant, Egypt, Cyprus and Libya. She has researched the impact of empire on both rulers and ruled in the Late Bronze Age, and she focuses generally upon the relationship between aesthetic sensibilities and social identification in both the ancient and modern world. Hulin has taken part in numerous excavations and surveys across the eastern Mediterranean and is currently preparing the the Western Marmarica Coastal Survey in Libya for publication. She is also exploring the lives of sailors on land in the Late Bronze age eastern Mediterranean. Hulin is also PI of the project Making Maritime Memories: the British Country House and the Sea
Linda is the Principal Investigator for the project Practical Mariner. She is also co-organiser of the TORCH-funded research network inHabit: Text, Object and Domestic space, with Oliver Cox (Thames Valley Country House Partnership), Antony Buxton (Continuing Education) and Jane Andeson (School of Architecture, Oxford Brookes University)
Undergraduate Teaching
From Hunting and Gathering to States and Empires in South-west Asia (with Amy Bogaard)
Contribution to:
Introduction to World Archaeology
Urbanism and Change in Complex Society