Engaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies

In 1939, a boy called Horst Trzeciak was playing on a piece of land on the outskirts of Berlin. While playing, he found a number of pottery sherds. In an exemplary fashion he brought the sherds to the “Märkisches Provinzialmuseum”, which was, at that time, the city museum of Berlin. The sherds were...

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Autor principal: Julia Heeb
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: EXARC 2019
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/fd84db3d577f48a8899c6d54f7acb12e
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:fd84db3d577f48a8899c6d54f7acb12e2021-12-01T14:42:34ZEngaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies2212-8956https://doaj.org/article/fd84db3d577f48a8899c6d54f7acb12e2019-08-01T00:00:00Zhttps://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10442https://doaj.org/toc/2212-8956In 1939, a boy called Horst Trzeciak was playing on a piece of land on the outskirts of Berlin. While playing, he found a number of pottery sherds. In an exemplary fashion he brought the sherds to the “Märkisches Provinzialmuseum”, which was, at that time, the city museum of Berlin. The sherds were identified as medieval and catalogued. After WWII, the city of Berlin was divided, the “Märkisches Provinzialmuseum” landed on the eastern side of the wall. Archaeologists working in the western part of Berlin began researching the medieval colonization of Berlin and Brandenburg. While investigating potential sites for research excavations, they came across the sherds found in 1939. As the sherds could be dated to the medieval period around 1200 AD, the site was deemed suitable for better understanding the change in settlement patterns during that period. From 1967, the site was excavated as part of a DFG project (DFG=German Research Association).Julia HeebEXARCarticleeducationpublicliving historylandscapearchaeological open-air museumlate middle agesgermanyMuseums. Collectors and collectingAM1-501ArchaeologyCC1-960ENEXARC Journal, Iss 2019/3 (2019)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic education
public
living history
landscape
archaeological open-air museum
late middle ages
germany
Museums. Collectors and collecting
AM1-501
Archaeology
CC1-960
spellingShingle education
public
living history
landscape
archaeological open-air museum
late middle ages
germany
Museums. Collectors and collecting
AM1-501
Archaeology
CC1-960
Julia Heeb
Engaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies
description In 1939, a boy called Horst Trzeciak was playing on a piece of land on the outskirts of Berlin. While playing, he found a number of pottery sherds. In an exemplary fashion he brought the sherds to the “Märkisches Provinzialmuseum”, which was, at that time, the city museum of Berlin. The sherds were identified as medieval and catalogued. After WWII, the city of Berlin was divided, the “Märkisches Provinzialmuseum” landed on the eastern side of the wall. Archaeologists working in the western part of Berlin began researching the medieval colonization of Berlin and Brandenburg. While investigating potential sites for research excavations, they came across the sherds found in 1939. As the sherds could be dated to the medieval period around 1200 AD, the site was deemed suitable for better understanding the change in settlement patterns during that period. From 1967, the site was excavated as part of a DFG project (DFG=German Research Association).
format article
author Julia Heeb
author_facet Julia Heeb
author_sort Julia Heeb
title Engaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies
title_short Engaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies
title_full Engaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies
title_fullStr Engaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Engaging Diverse Audiences at the Archaeological Open-air Museum Düppel in Berlin – Practical Examples and New Strategies
title_sort engaging diverse audiences at the archaeological open-air museum düppel in berlin – practical examples and new strategies
publisher EXARC
publishDate 2019
url https://doaj.org/article/fd84db3d577f48a8899c6d54f7acb12e
work_keys_str_mv AT juliaheeb engagingdiverseaudiencesatthearchaeologicalopenairmuseumduppelinberlinpracticalexamplesandnewstrategies
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