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Jacquetta Hawkes OBE FBA (5 August 1910 – 18 March 1996) was an English archaeologist and writer. She was the first woman to study the Archaeology & Anthropology degree course at the University of Cambridge.
Oct 26, 2020 · Basic Biographical Information. Jessie Jacquetta Hawkes (nee Hopkins) also known as Jacquetta Priestley was born on August 5, 1910, in Cambridge, UK. Her father was the Nobel prize-winning biochemist and Trinity don, Frederick Gowland Hopkins, and her mother, Jessie Ann, introduced her to museums.
- christine.finn@gmail.com
Jul 28, 2018 · Jacquetta Hawkes was a twentieth-century English woman of letters, archaeologist, anthropologist, writer and activist. On occasion, she collaborated with her famous husband J. B. Priestley.
- Ina Habermann
- 2018
Jacquetta Hopkins, writer and archaeologist: born Cambridge 5 August 1910; FSA 1940; Principal, Post- War Reconstruction Secretariat 1941-43; staff, Ministry of Education / Principal and...
Born Jacquetta Hopkins in Cambridge, England, on August 5, 1910; died on March 18, 1996; daughter of Sir Frederick Hopkins (a Nobel prizewinner); educated at Newnham College, University of Cambridge, and subsequently took part in many archaeological excavations between 1931 and 1940, in Britain, Ireland, France, and Palestine; married ...
Jacquetta Hawkes OBE FBA (5 August 1910 – 18 March 1996) was an English archaeologist and writer. She was the first woman to study the Archaeology & Anthropology degree course at the University of Cambridge.
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Jacquetta Hawkes (1910-1996) had an immensely rich and varied life, motivated by her passion for the distant past. She was a highly respected archaeologist, a writer of poems, plays and articles, a film-maker and broadcaster and peace campaigner.