Research Interests |
Archaeology, epigraphy, funerary archaeology, settlement archaeology, GIS, network analysis, survey
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Publications |
Rajala, U., and Mills, P., 2017a. ‘Introduction: from taskscape to ceramiscene and beyond’, in U. Rajala and P. Mills (eds.). Forms of dwelling: 20 years of taskscapes in archaeology, 1-15. Oxford: Oxbow.
Rajala, U., and Mills, P., 2017b. ‘Interpreting a ceramiscene: characterising late republican and imperial landscapes’, in U. Rajala and P. Mills (eds.). Forms of dwelling: 20 years of taskscapes in archaeology, 62-84. Oxford: Oxbow.
Rajala, U., 2016. ‘Nested identities and mental distances: Archaic burials in Latium Vetus’, in E. Perego and R. Scopacasa (eds.). Burial and Social Change in Ancient Italy 9th–5th century BC: Approaching Social Agents, 161-193. Oxford: Oxbow.
Rajala, U., 2016. ‘Pre-colonial Latin colonies and the transition to the Middle Republican period: Orientalizing and Archaic settlement evidence from the Nepi Survey’, Papers of the British School at Rome 84, 1-72.
Rajala, U., 2016. ‘Separating the Emotions: Archaeological Mentalities in Central Italian Funerary Archaeology’, in H. Williams and M. Giles (eds.). Archaeologists and the Dead: Mortuary Archaeology in Contemporary Society, 68-96. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Rajala, U., 2016. ‘The town and territory of Nepi: the population of the earliest Nepi’, in P. Attema, J. Seubers and S. Willemsen (eds.), Early States, Territories and Settlements in Protohistoric Central Italy. Proceedings of a specialist conference at the Groningen Institute of Archaeology of the University of Groningen, 2013. Corollaria Crustumina, 2, 111-123. Groningen: Groningen Institute of Archaeolog and Barkhuis.
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