Svetlana Lunina

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Svetlana Borisovna Lunina is an Uzbekistani archaeologist specialising in the study of ceramic material and painting techniques of Central Asian monuments. She was a professor at Tashkent State University.

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Education and career

Svetlana Borisovna Lunina was born in Tashkent to the family of B. V. Lunina. [1] She attended the Faculty of History of the Central Asian State University, where she obtained a degree in history and archaeology in 1955. [1] Between 1955 and 1958, she studied archaeology under the supervision of Mikhail Masson and Galina Pugachenkova, [1] and in 1960, she started working as a teacher in the Department of Archaeology at Tashkent State University. She defended her thesis on ceramics from Merv in 1968, after collecting material during the expedition of the South Turkmenistan Archaeological Complex (YuTAKE). [1]

Lunina became an associate professor at Tashkent State University in 1963 and served as the head of the department of archaeology from 1968 to 1981. From 1981 to 1984, she was an associate professor of history. [1] She taught various aspects of Central Asian archaeology, from historical, archaeological, and artistic perspectives. As head of department, she organised courses in history and theory of arts and established a laboratory of stratigraphy of quaternary sediments and ancient mines of Uzbekistan in Samarkand, in collaboration with the department of geology. [1]

Research and fieldwork

Lunina's research covers the problems of the history of the eastern medieval city, the dynamics of its historical topography, the periodisation of the history of the development of craft production, the specialisation of craftsmanship, construction techniques, trade and cultural links both within the Central Asian region and in nearby and remote regions.[ citation needed ] She has published more than 150 scientific articles. [1]  

Lunina participated in excavations at Merv in the early sixties. She later organised expeditions in the Tashkent area (including Nogai-Kurgan, Kugaittepa, and Mingtepa cemetery) and in southern Turkmenistan. [1] In 1964, she began participating in the expedition to Kashkasarya (TAKE), which she directed between 1968 and 1981. Its research focused on monuments ranging from the Late Bronze and Iron Age to the Middle Ages. The expedition contributed significantly to the study of the ancient cities of the Kashkadar valley, including Shakhrisyabz, Chiracchi, Kitaba and many other settlements in the area. [1]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Shirinov, Temur Shirinovich (2012). O'Zbekiston Arxeologiyasi [Archaeology Uzbekistan N2.[5]] (in Russian). Samarkand: Academy of science of the Republic of Uzbekistan {Institute of archaeology named after Ya. Gulyamov). pp. 108–120.