Melanie Giles


Melanie Giles FSA is an archaeologist and leading expert on Iron Age Britain. She is a Senior Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Manchester.

Education

Giles completed her BA in Archaeology and MA in Landscape Archaeology at the University of Sheffield. Her PhD, undertaken at the University of Sheffield was supervised by Mike Parker Pearson and John Barrett. She investigated the Iron Age landscapes of East Yorkshire. The thesis was titled Open-weave, close-knit' : archaeologies of identity in the later prehistoric landscape of East Yorkshire'''.

Career

Giles' initial research looked at Iron Age communities, especially the square barrow burials of East Yorkshire, resulting in her major monograph A Forged Glamour. The book combined evidence for landscape management and mobility, aspects of community, power and personal biography, approached through the study of material culture including Iron Age mirrors, swords, shields and jewellery. The book was described as 'a model of how big questions can be addressed by close attention to the archaeological data'. More recent work has addressed disease and violence in Iron Age Britain, and their relationship with funerary behaviour and mortuary treatment. Giles is a member of the Bog Body network, and has undertaken research on Iron Age bog bodies. She has also undertaken the study of material culture, including the aesthetics of martial objects, and the symbolic aspects of ironworking technology. Giles has also undertaken research on industrial archaeology, including horse lads in East Yorkshire, and the Whitworth Park Community Archaeology and History Project.
Giles joined the University of Manchester after having taught at University College Dublin and the University of Leicester. She was elected as a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 2016.

Selected publications

Making metal and forging relations: Ironworking in the British Iron Age. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 26: 395-413.
Iron Age bog bodies of north-western Europe. Representing the dead. Archaeological Dialogues 16: 75-101.
A Forged Glamour: Landscape, Identity and Material Culture in the Iron Age. Oxford: Windgather Press.
Performing pain, performing beauty: dealing with difficult death in the Iron Age. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 25: 539-550.