Jacquetta Hawkes Writer

Jacquetta Hawkes (5 August 1910 – 18 March 1996) was a British archaeologist and writer. Born Jessie Jacquetta Hopkins, the daughter of Nobel Prize-winning scientist, Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, she married first Christopher Hawkes, then an Assistant Keeper at the British Museum, in 1933. From 1953, she was married to J. B. Priestley. She is perhaps best known generally for her book A Land (1951). She was a prolific writer on subjects quite removed from her principal field. She was above all interested in discovering the lives of the peoples revealed by scientific excavations. With her first husband, Christopher Hawkes, she co-authored Prehistoric Britain (1943) and with J. B. Priestley she wrote Dragon's Mouth (1952) and Journey Down a Rainbow (1955). Her other works include The World of the Past (1963), "Prehistory (History of Mankind: Cultural and Scientific Development, Volume 1 Part 1)" (1963) prepared under the auspices of UNESCO, The Atlas of Early Man (1976) and The Shell Guide to British Archaeology (1986).

Personal facts

Birth dateAugust 05, 1910
Birth place
Cambridge
Date of deathMarch 18, 1996

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Writer

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Jacquetta Hawkes on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.bradford.ac.uk/library/special-collections/collections/jacquetta-hawkes-archive