Res. Dr Rada Varga (Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca), PI, has not only led individual and team projects before,
but her expertise is adequate for a project developed around the scientific exploration of the phenomena of the materiality
of cultural identity in Roman Dacia.
Rada Varga
Res. Dr George Bounegru (National Union Museum, Alba Iulia): is a highly experienced
archaeologist and museographer, as well as coordinator from the musem’s part of the
excavation at Războieni. He has published several studies on Roman material culture,
as well as a monograph on the necropolises of Apulum. He will take part in the
analysis of the artefacts, establishing import/export networks (if there is the case)
and creating the concept for the exhibition.
George Bounegru
Res. Dr Dan Deac (Museum of History and Art, Zalău) a recognized specialist
on matters pertaining to the religious realities of Roman Dacia and the archaeology
of Dacia Porolissensis. His expertise will be necessary in terms of recognizing
and identifying the materiality of the inhabitants of western Germania Inferior
(the Batavians, Cananefati and Tungri) in Dacia Porolissensis.
Dan Deac
Dr Imola Boda is one of the initial collaborator of the archaeological
project and she has worked on the site’s database. Her expertise: database, site, contextualization of artefacts.
Imola Boda
PhD candidate Cristina Crizbășan (University of Exeter) (CC) focuses her PhD thesis on the analysis
of pottery selections made by the Batavian auxilia, as an essential tool in understanding the ways
in which identities have been constructed, maintained, and transformed within these units as they
were garrisoned across the Empire.
Cristina Crizbășan