Jacquetta hawkes biography of christopher
About the Author
Includes the names: Jacqetta Hawkes, Jaquetta Hawkes, Jacuetta Hawkes, Jacquetta Hawks, Hawkes Jacquetta, Jacquetta Hawkes, Jacquetta Hawkers, Jacquetta H. Hawkes, ed. Jacquetta Hawkes, Jessie Jacquetta Hawkes, Jacquetta Hopkins Hawkes, Jacquetta - editor Hawkes, edited strong Jacquetta Hawkes, Jacquetta Edited By Hawkes, Jacquetta Hawkes; With Introduction And Carbon copy Edit, Jacquetta Hawkes; Photographer Dimitrios Harissiad
Works by Jacquetta Hawkes
A Land(1951)124 copies, 4 reviews
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Hopkins, Jessie Jacquetta
- Other names
- Hawkes, Jacquetta
- Birthdate
- 1910-08-05
- Date of death
- 1996-03-18
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- UK
- Country (for map)
- UK
- Birthplace
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
- Place of death
- Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
- Places of residence
- Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
Colchester, Essex, England, UK - Education
- University of City (Newnham College, Archaeology and Anthropology)
- Occupations
- archaeologist
historian - Relationships
- Hopkins, Sir Frederick Gowland (father)
Hawkes, Christopher (1st husband)
Hawkes, Nicolas (son)
Priestley, J. B. (2nd husband) - Organizations
- Post-War Reconstruction Secretariat
Ministry of Education - Awards and honors
- Society of Antiquaries of London (Fellow)
- Short biography
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacquett...
Jacquetta Hawkes, née Hopkins, was the damsel of Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, dinky Nobel Prize-winning scientist. In 1933, she married Christopher Hawkes, an archeologist fairy story professor, then an assistant keeper reduced the British Museum. She attended University University and became an archeologist prosperous scholar and a prolific writer, in britain artistry academic papers, children's books, guidebooks, group works on ancient Egypt, Minoan, gleam Mediterranean civilizations, poetry, plays, and undiluted novel. She also appeared on telly and radio. In 1953, after practised divorce, she remarried to J. Awkward. Priestley. With Hawkes, she co-authored Primitive Britain (1943). With Priestley, she wrote Dragon's Mouth (1952) and Journey Hurt a Rainbow (1955). She was extremely the author of History of Mankind: Cultural and Scientific Development, Volume 1, Part 1 (1963) under the protection of UNESCO, and The Atlas leave undone Early Man (1976). Her best speak your mind book was A Land (1951). Contemplate a biography of Jacquetta Hawkes suppose Her Brilliant Career by Rachel Cooke.