Professor Gordon Noble

Professor Gordon Noble
Professor Gordon Noble
Professor Gordon Noble

MA (Aberdeen), MA (UCL), PhD (Reading), FSAScot

Personal Chair

Accepting PhDs

About
Email Address
g.noble@abdn.ac.uk
Telephone Number
+44 (0)1224 272333
Office Address

Department of Archaeology University of Aberdeen St. Mary's, Elphinstone Road Aberdeen AB24 3UF Scotland Room No. 203

School/Department
School of Geosciences

Biography

Professor Gordon Noble has undertaken award-winning landscape research and field projects working on projects from the Mesolithic to Medieval periods. He has two major current projects, Northern Picts, funded by the University of Aberdeen Development Trust and Historic Environment Scotland, is focused on the post-Roman societies of northern Britain. The second, Comparative Kingship, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, is examining the early royal landscapes of Ireland and Scotland. Research for the Northern Picts and Comparitive Kingship projects won Research Project of the Year 2021 in the Current Archaeology Awards, the leading UK archaeology awards programme. 

Public engagement is a big part of his research with Northern Picts having featured in numerous exhibitions and on BBC 2 'Digging for Britain', National Geographic, Radio 4 'In Our Time' and many other media venues. 

Gordon was appointed as lecturer to the department at Aberdeen in July 2008. In 2012 he became Senior Lecturer, Head of Department in 2015, Reader in 2017 and Professor in 2019. He is also a Honorary Curatorial Fellow to the University Museums.

Latest book:

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"the best overview of this fascinating people to date: clear, essential, and revelatory reading" -- Professor Neil Price

“This book is a triumph. It marks a milestone in Pictish studies, and will be the starting place for all those interested in the Picts. We will be indebted to Noble and Evans for many years to come...It marks a step-change in, perhaps even a coming of age for, Pictish studies.” -- Pictish Arts Society

"Picts is an extraordinary work that covers seven centuries of Pictish history and archaeology, but is also engagingly written with the general reader in mind"-- Current Archaology

"Noble and Evans have written a book to read and cherish"-- The Scotsman

https://birlinn.co.uk/product/picts/

A short interview with Prof G!

https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/lifestyle/4009718/a-passion-for-the-past-an-interview-with-professor-gordon-noble/

Qualifications

  • History of Art First Class Honours 
    2000 - University of Aberdeen 
  • Masters Archaeology 
    2001 - University College London 
  • PhD Archaeology 
    2004 - University of Reading 
  • Pg Cert Teaching 
    2007 - University of Glasgow 

Memberships and Affiliations

Internal Memberships

 

  • Research Theme Leader
  • Honorary Curatorial Fellow to University Museums
External Memberships
  • 2013-16 External Examiner, Department of Archaeology, University of Reading

    2017-21 External Examiner, Department of Archaeology, University of Newcastle

    2018-22 External Examiner, Department of Archaeology, University of Edinburgh

  • 2015 External panel member for undergraduate teaching programme review, University of Edinburgh

  • Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (elected fellow 2006; Council member 2009-12)
  • Reviewer (Journals): 

    Antiquity, World Archaeology, European Journal of Archaeology, Cambridge Archaeological Journal, Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Journal of Maritime Archaeology, The Scottish Archaeological Journal, Papers from the Institute of Archaeology University College London, Journal of Irish Archaeology, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology

  • Reviewer (Grants):

    Arts and Humanities Research Council; Leverhulme Trust; Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland; National Geographic; Riksbanken Sweden; Nordic Research Council

Latest Publications

View My Publications

Prizes and Awards

Research Project of the Year 2021 Current Archaeology Awards

Leverhulme Leadership Award (2016–22)

Outstanding Research Award Individuals Further Stage of Career – Non Stem, University of Aberdeen 2021

Principal’s Prize for Public Engagement Senior Award 2016

Arts and Humanities Research Council Early Career Fellow. Ritual and remembrance at the third millennium BC prehistoric monument complex at Forteviot, central Scotland. AHRC Award AH/I02657X/1 2012

British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow 2005–8

 

Research

Research Overview

Prehistoric and early medieval Europe with particular interests in: Scotland, Ireland, Sweden & Denmark

Research Areas

Accepting PhDs

I am currently accepting PhDs in Archaeology.


Please get in touch if you would like to discuss your research ideas further.

Email Me

Archaeology

Supervising
Accepting PhDs

Research Specialisms

  • Archaeology
  • Environmental Geoscience

Our research specialisms are based on the Higher Education Classification of Subjects (HECoS) which is HESA open data, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

Current Research

Comparative Kingship 2017-

The nature of the societies and social, ideological and political frameworks that filled the chasm left by the demise of the Roman Empire in the 5th  century AD – both within and beyond the Empire’s boundaries – is one of the most contentious debates about  late- and post- Roman Europe. This project adopts an innovative interdisciplinary focus that tackles  the formation of the socio-political landscapes  of Northern Britain and Ireland,  utilizing archaeological, historical, toponymic and  palaeoenvironmental methodologies along with Bayesian-modelled chronologies,  to create a new  synthesis of the  dramatic changes that  ultimately led to the formation of the state societies that existed beyond the edges of the Roman Empire.

Funding: Leverhulme Trust Leadership Award

 

Northern Picts 2012-

Northern Picts is a project that aims to uncover the archaeological traces of Pictish society in northern Scotland. The project to date has had some spectacular successes. We have begun to uncover a major and undocumented Pictish royal centre at Rhynie and discovered a significant portion of a major Pictish silver hoard at Gaulcross. We have scaled sea cliffs to discover forgotten Pictish forts and centres of power. Find out more here.

Funding: University of Aberdeen Development Trust (private donation) and Historic Envrionment Scotland (PI)

Project partners: Tarbat Discovery Centre, National Museums of Scotland, University of Chester, University of Glasgow, Inverness Museum & Art Gallery, Rhynie Woman, CMS Archaeology, Forestry Commission Scotland, Aberdeenshire Council, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Mainz

Bennachie Landscapes Project 2012-

North-east Scotland contains landscapes of world-leading importance for history, archaeology and community heritage. This project focuses on building heritage-based partnerships and involves an interdisciplinary community-centred research project concentrating on the past, present and future significance of one of north-east Scotland's most celebrated cultural and physical landmarks: the hill of Bennachie and its environs.

Funding: AHRC Development Grant (PI)

Project partners: Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS), Bailies of Bennachie, Aberdeenshire Council, Forestry Commission

Woodland in the Neolithic of Northern Europe: The Forest as Ancestor.

A book length study of the social role of trees and woodlands in prehistory with case studies from Britain and Ireland and South Scandinavia. Incorporating environmental, anthropological and archaeological approaches, this study aims to formulate new approaches to the study of past landscapes. The final book is published by Cambridge University Press.

Funding: British Academy (PI)

Supervision

My current supervision areas are: Archaeology.

Accepting PhDs, particularly on the following subjects:

- Early Medieval Archaeology

- Prehistoric Archaeology

- Field Excavation and Survey

Funding and Grants

In the course of my career Professor Noble has led on successful research grants totalling over £2.5 million, £2.25 of which has been raised while at Aberdeen (2008-21).

Recent major grants:

  • 2021-2024    Principal-Investigator, 'The Citadel Project: Rescue- and Research-led Excavations at an Early Medieval Power Centre'; Historic Environment Scotland (£257,431)
  • 2017-2022    Principal-Investigator, 'Comparative Kingship: the early medieval kingdoms of Northern Britain and Ireland'; Leverhulme Trust (£971,149)
  • 2012-2022    Principal-Investigator, ‘Northern Picts: ’, University of Aberdeen Development Trust; Historic Environment Scotland (£351,249)
Teaching

Programmes

  • Undergraduate, 4 year, September start
  • Undergraduate, 4 year, September start
  • MSc Archaeology
    Postgraduate, 3 semester, January start

Teaching Responsibilities

Course co-ordinator of undergraduate modules:

  • AY3009 Scottish Archaeology
  • AY3010 Professional Archaeology I
  • AY3011 Archaeological Fieldwork Portfolio

Additional teaching on a range of other modules including Archaeology of the North, Advanced Archaeological Practice, Archaeologies of Social Life and Landscape Archaeology

Publications

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  • Monumental Journeys: ceremonial complexes and routeways across Neolithic Scotland

    Noble, G.
    Prehistoric Journeys. Cummings, V., Johnson, R. (eds.). Oxbow Books, pp. 64-74, 11 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters (Peer-Reviewed)
  • ‘As thick as two short planks’: Neolithic barrows in eastern and southern Britain

    Noble, G.
    Beyond the grave: new perspectives on barrows. Last, J. (ed.). Oxbow Books, pp. 14-21, 8 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters (Peer-Reviewed)
  • Landscape and Environment in Dark Age Scotland (Book Review)

    Noble, G.
    Scottish Archaeological Journal, vol. 28, no. 1, pp. 66-68
    Contributions to Journals: Reviews of Books, Films and Articles
  • Harnessing the waves: monuments and ceremonial complexes in Orkney and beyond

    Noble, G.
    Journal of Maritime Archaeology, vol. 1, pp. 100-117
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Landscape with symbols

    Noble, G.
    British Archaeology, vol. 87, pp. 14-15
    Contributions to Specialist Publications: Articles
  • Neolithic Scotland: Timber, Stone, Earth and Fire

    Noble, G.
    Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh. 320 pages
    Books and Reports: Books
  • Tree architecture: building monuments from the forest

    Noble, G.
    Journal of Iberian Archaeology, vol. 8, pp. 53-72
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Henge Monuments of the British Isles (Book Review)

    Noble, G.
    Scottish Archaeological Journal, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 191-193
    Contributions to Journals: Reviews of Books, Films and Articles
  • Ancestry, farming and the changing architecture of the Clyde Cairns of southwest Scotland

    Noble, G.
    Set in stone: new approaches to Neolithic monuments in Scotland. Cummings, V., Pannett, A. (eds.). Oxbow Books, pp. 25-36
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters (Peer-Reviewed)
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