Prof. Dr. habil. Dirk Krausse is Department Director and Vice President of the State Office for Heritage Conservation at the Stuttgart Regional Council. In this function, he is responsible for the coordination of archaeological heritage conservation in Baden-Württemberg. He is also Associate Professor of Prehistory at the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen. He studied prehistory and early history, ethnology, empirical cultural studies and anthropology at the Universities of Göttingen and Kiel. He received his doctorate in 1994 at the Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel, where he qualified as a professor in 2001. Since 2003, he has worked as head of department, and since 2008 as overall head of archaeological heritage conservation at the Baden-Württemberg State Office for Heritage Conservation. His work and research focuses on the pre-Roman Iron Age in Central and Western Europe, the transition from the Iron Age to the Roman period and general aspects of theory and practice of archaeological heritage conservation and research. From 2004 to 2010, he coordinated the priority program 1171 of the German Research Foundation, and since 2014 the DFG long-term project for the research of the Hallstatt period princely seat Heuneburg.
Bettina Arnold obtained her BA in Archaeology from Yale University and her MA and PhD degrees in Anthropology from Harvard University. She is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and Adjunct Curator of European Archaeology at the Milwaukee Public Museum. Her research interests include the archaeological interpretation of complex societies as reflected in mortuary contexts and alcoholic beverages; the archaeology of gender; and the socio-political history of archaeology and museums in 19th and 20th century nationalist and ethnic movements in Europe and the United States. She published a ground-breaking article on the use and abuse of archaeology for political purposes in Nazi Germany in Antiquity in 1990 that has been reprinted repeatedly and has been featured in documentaries dealing with the Iron Age Celts of Europe and National Socialist archaeology in Germany. Recent publications include a 2025 co-edited volume with Springer entitled Connecting People and Ideas: Networks and Networking in Archaeology. She is a co-editor of the Cambridge University Press Elements in the Archaeology of Europe series, which is co-sponsored by the European Association of Archaeologists.
Matthew Leigh Murray completed a BA in Anthropology at the University of Connecticut. He received an MA and PhD in Anthropology from Harvard University. He is Instructional Professor in Anthropology at the University of Mississippi. He began his European archaeology career excavating Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Graves at Uttendorf and Dürrnberg bei Hallein in Austria and restoring burial ceramics from the excavations. As a graduate student, he published one of the first bone chemistry studies of the diet and status in an Early Iron Age burial community in southeastern Europe and has investigated Bronze Age, Iron Age, and Roman sites across southern Germany. He was an early advocate for the use of critical social geography in the study of Iron Age landscapes and Bronze Age to Iron Age sociocultural change and has championed multiscalar analysis of mortuary practices in Early Iron Age cemeteries. His current research is focused on mortuary archaeology, prehistoric landscapes, cultural change, and archaeological resource management in southeastern Germany.