CURRICULUM VITAE (WITH SIGNIFICANT SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENTS)

1. Personal information: Name and surname: LAVINIA GRUMEZA. Date and place of birth: 14.06.1985; Anina (Caraș-Severin). Address: , Timișoara, Timiș, N. Titulescu Street, 11A/4. E-mail address: [email protected]; phone number: 0752514741. 2. Education: 2000-2004: High school Colegiul Naţional Bănăţean, Timișoara, French- German Section. 2004-2008: BA in Ancient History and Archaeology at Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca. 2008-2010: MA in Classical Antiquity at Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca. 2010- 2013: PhD in History at 1 Decembrie 1918 University of Alba Iulia. PhD published in 2014: Sarmatian Cemeteries from Banat (Late 1st – Early 5th Centuries AD), Mega Publishing House: Cluj- Napoca. 2014-2015: Post-doctoral studies at West University of Timișoara, with the project: Sarmatian Settlements in Banat (2nd-5th c. AD). From Nomadism to Sedentarism in Barbaricum. 3. Main research interest: Roman History and Archaeology, Funerary Archaeology; Sarmatians, Roman Imports in Barbaricum. 4. Language skills: Mother tongue: Romanian. Fluent: English, French (Certificate DALF, Diplômes officiels du Ministère de l’Education de France, obtained in 2005). Medium level: German (Deutsches Kulturzentrum Klausenburg, Stufe B2.1, obtained in 2009). Reading level: Hungarian. 5. Membership: Register of ‘Romanian Archaeologists’ (since 2011; Expert since 2016). Member in the editorial board of the book series Pontica et Mediterranea (since 2015). Member in Rei Cretariae Romanae Fautores (since 2014), and ‘Romanian Association for Baltic and Nordic Studies’ (since 2012). 6. Work experience: 2013-2017: Museographer, Caransebeș County Museum; Assistant Researcher (half time), Institute of Archaeology and Art History Cluj-Napoca. 2017-2019: Post- Doctoral researcher at the Romanian Academy, Iași Branch. 7. Archaeological excavations (selected): 2017: Brașov -Cluj-Oradea Motorway, Sector 3A Cluj Vest; 2013-2016: Tibiscum–Roman town; 2015: Băile Herculane–Roman thermae; 2010 and 2014: Timişoara-Arad-Nădlac Motorway; 2013: Zăvoi–Roman villa; 2011-2012: Sânandrei, Corneşti; 2009: Apulum–praetorium consularis; 2009: Histria–Basilica extra muros and Sarmatian cemetery; 2007-2008: Carnuntum–Roman town; 2006-2009: Napoca–Roman town; 2006-2008: Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa–Roman necropolis and Capitolium; 2006: – Dacian fortress; 2005: Potaissa–Roman legionary camp. 8. Presentations to internationally established conferences, international advanced schools and universities (selected): 1) International Scientific Conference. Humboldt Colleague (Contact zones of Europe from the 3rd mill. BC to the 1st mill. AD), Moscow (29 September-2 October 2017) with the paper: CRFB R1. Trade, gifts and long-distance contacts in ‘Sarmatian’ Barbaricum, West of Roman ; 2) International Symposium in Classical History and Archaeology ARCHON 2017, Sevastopol (9-12 October 2017) with the paper Chersonesus and its antiquities in the BCOSPE project (in collaboration with V. Cojocaru); 3) International Workshop: Advances in Ancient Black Sea Studies: Methodological Innovation, Interdisciplinary Perspectives and International Cooperation, Iași (17–18 July 2017), with the paper From the North Pontic Traditions to the Roman Imports and Baltic Amber: Sarmatian Barbaricum as Endless Contact Zone of Antiquity; 4) Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca – invited speaker (24 November 2016), with the paper: Roman Imports in Sarmatian Barbaricum (between Dacia and Pannonia); 5) 30th Congress of the Rei Cretariae Romanae Fautores, Lisbon (25 September-1 October 2016) with the paper: Inscriptions on the Hispanic Amphorae from ; 6) International Conference Pontica, Constanța, the 49th Ed. (6-8 October 2016), with the paper BCOSPE III. Ars, res sacrae & mythologica: A New Project Introduces Itself (in collaboration with V. Cojocaru); 7) Aarhus Institute of Advance Studies, International Conference in memory of Pia Guldager Bilde (Denmark, 6-8 April 2016), with the paper: Cultural Transfer from the North Pontic Area to the Great Hungarian Plain. The Sarmatian Culture in the South of the Plain; 8) International Conference Pontica, Constanța, the 48th Ed. (6-7 October 2015), with the paper Sarmatian Graves and Rituals Recently Discovered North of Mureș River (Motorway Arad-Nădlac); 9) 23. International Congress Ingolstadt (12-23 September 2015), with the paper Where is the Border? In Search of the Western Dacian Limes from the Barbarian Perspective; 10) International Symposium Mobility in Research on the Black Sea Region, Iaşi (5-10 July 2015), with the paper The Sarmatians around the Province of Dacia and Their Relations with the ; 11) International Symposium ‘In memoriam Constantini Daicoviciu’, the 41th Ed., Caransebeș (17-20 February 2015), with the paper: Post Roman and Sarmatian Pottery Workshops in Banat during the End of the 3rd–Beginning of the 5th Century AD; 12) 29th Congress of the Rei Cretariae Romanae Fautores, Xanten (21-26 September 2014), with the paper: Late Roman Pottery Discovered at Tibiscum (End of the 3rd–4th Century AD); 13) International Symposium Archaeological Small Finds and their Significance, Deva (4-5 April 2013), with the paper Beads in Sarmatian Female Costume from the Banat Region; 14) Hauskolloquium der Eurasienabteilung des DAI Berlin – invited speaker (29 January 2013), with the paper Sarmatian Graves and Necropolises from the Territory of Banat (1st–4th C. AD). 9. Funding & scholarships received so far. Individual grants: 2010-2013: Doctoral scholarship POSDRU/CPP107/DMI1.5/S/ at 1 Decembrie 1918 University of Alba Iulia, with the project: Sarmatian Cemeteries from Banat (Late 1st–Early 5th Centuries AD); 2014-2015: Post- doctoral scholarship POSDRU/159/1.5/S/140863 at West University of Timișoara, with the project: Sarmatian Settlements in Banat (2nd – 5th Centuries AD). From Nomadism to Sedentarism in Barbaricum; October-November 2014: Scholarship Domus Hungarica at Hungarian Academy of Science Budapest/Hungary, with the project: Late Sarmatian Cemeteries from Banat (3rd–5th centuries AD); November-December 2017: Scholarship Domus Hungarica at Hungarian Academy of Science Budapest/Hungary, with the project: Corpus of the Roman imports in European Barbaricum. Arad and Timiș counties. Team grants: 2013-2016: member in the project of the Institute of Archaeology and Art History Cluj-Napoca: Orbis Romanus and barbaricum. The nomad barbarian world (the Sarmatians) around the province of Dacia and its relations with the Roman Empire (PN-II-RU-TE-2012-3-0216) and Roman versus barbarian identity – the phenomenology of acculturation. The case of Roman Dacia and the adjacent barbarian world (PN-II-ID-PCE-2012-4- 0210). 2016-2017: collaborator in the project of the Romanian Minister of Culture: The National Programme: Limes (part of a large international project: Frontiers of the Roman Empire’ World Heritage Site). 2017-2019: member in the project of the Romanian Academy, Iași Branch: Bibliographia classica orae septentrionalis Ponti Euxini. III. Ars, res sacrae & mythological (PN- III-P4-ID-PCE-2016-0279). 11. Research stays abroad: March-May 2012 & November-December 2013: Institute of Archaeology of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest. November 2012-January 2013: Institut für Prähistorische Archäologie Freie Universität Berlin. January 2014: University of Szeged, Department of Archaeology. May-June 2015: DAI Frankfurt. April 2016: DAI Munich. February & November 2017: Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum Mainz. 12. Research monographs/books: 1) L. Grumeza, Sarmatian Cemeteries from Banat (Late 1st – Early 5th Centuries AD), Mega Publishing House, Cluj-Napoca 2014, 413 p.; 2). L. Grumeza, A. Ursuțiu, G. Copos, Arad ‘Barieră’. Rescue Excavation in a Sarmatian Period Site, Mega Publishing House, Cluj-Napoca 2013, 131 p. 13. Chapters in collective volumes/proceedings & peer-reviewed scientific journals (selective, from a total of 25): 1) Where is the Border? In Search of the Western Dacian Limes from the ‘Barbarian’ Perspective, in: Proceedings of the Limes Congress 2015 Ingolstadt. Beiträge zum Welterbe Limes IX 2017 (in press); 2) Weapons and military equipment in Sarmatian female graves from the Carpathian Basin, in: Daughters of Ares Warrior Women of Eurasia from prehistory to the XVII. C. AD, Budapest 2017 (in press); 3) Sarmatian Personal Ornaments from the South- Eastern Part of the Great Hungarian Plain during the 1st‒3rd Centuries AD: Imports and Local Production, in: V. Cojocaru, A. Rubel (eds.), Mobility in Research on the Black Sea Region. The Proceedings of the International Symposium, Iași, July 5-10, 2015 (Pontica et Mediterranea VI), Cluj-Napoca 2016, 433-476; 4) Roman Beads found in Tibiscum, in: I. Ferencz [et al.] (eds.), Archaeological small finds and their significance. Proceedings of the Symposium: The costume as an identity expression (Cluj-Napoca) 2013, 157-178; 5) Stamped Hispanic Amphorae from Roman Dacia, in: Rei Cretariae Romane Fautores 45/2017 (in press); 6) Late Roman Pottery Discovered at Tibiscum-Iaz, Dacia (middle of the 3rd-4th century AD), in: Rei Cretariae Romane Fautores 44/2016, 571-580; 7) Post Roman and Sarmatian Pottery Workshops in Banat, Between the End of 3rd- Beginning of the 5th Century AD, in: Ephemeris Napocensis 26/2016, 67-106; 7) Cloisonné Brooches Discovered in Banat (Beginning of the Second Century A.D.–Last Third of the Third Century A.D.), in: 29/2015, 180-205; 8) Disc Brooches with Anthropomorphic Depiction Glass Intaglios in the Sarmatian Environment of the Great Hungarian Plain, in: Journal of Ancient History and Archaeology 1/4, 2014, 76-84; 9) Roman Coins in Sarmatian Graves from the Territory of Banat (2nd–4th Centuries AD), in: Analele Banatului 21/2013, 93-104; 10) The Sarmatian Necropolis from Foeni (Timiş County), in: Analele Banatului 19/2011, 181-205; 11) Review to: A. Simonenko, I.I. Marčenko, N.Ju. Limberis, Rӧmische Importe in sarmatischen und maiotischen Gräbern zwischen unterer Donau und Kuban, (Archäologie in Eurasien 25), Verlag Philipp von Zabern Mainz 2008, in: Prähistorische Zeitschrift 89/2, 2014, 423-428.