Olga Tufnell

Born: 26 January 1905, United Kingdom
Died: 11 April 1985
Country most active: Israel
Also known as: NA

Olga Tufnell FSA was a British archaeologist who worked on the excavation of the ancient city of Lachish (Tell ed-Duweir) in the 1930s. She had no formal archaeology training, but had worked as a secretary for Flinders Petrie for several years before being given a field assignment. Tufnell joined James Leslie Starkey in the expedition to Lachish in 1929 and remained part of the team for years.
When Starkey was killed in 1938, the team finished the season and then closed the site in 1939. Tufnell volunteered to write up the report of the dig and spent the next 20 years researching and writing up the majority of the excavation report, with the final publication (Lachish IV) in 1957. Her work is considered the “pre-eminent source book for Palestinian archeology”.
After her return to the UK in 1939, her work was almost immediately interrupted by the outbreak of World War II, as Tufnell was recruited to the BBC Arabic radio station due to her association with the Middle East; she was also an air raid warden.
At the end of the war, Tufnell returned to her work on the report, raising controversy when she published findings that the time period between two occupational levels, Level II (before Babylonian conquest by Nebuchadnezzar) and Level III (before Assyrian conquest by Sennacherib) was likely to be in the range of 100 years, rather than a decade, as Starkey had suggested. Although most archaeologists believed Starkey’s interpretation was more likely, subsequent excavations vindicated her opinion in 1973.
In 1951, Tufnell became a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, which she called one of her “greatest achievements”. Once the full Lachish report had been published, Tufnell turned her focus to the study of scarabs. Although many scholars dismissed the area of scarabs and seals as “unreliable of chronology”, Olga meticulously recorded their dimensions and styles. She was also an early user of computers for measuring the scarabs, and she was due to present a paper on that use of computers just days after her death in April 1985

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Posted in Archaeology, Writer.