Age, Biography and Wiki
Shadreck Chirikure was born on 1978. Discover Shadreck Chirikure's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 45 years old?
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Archaeologist |
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45 years old |
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1978.
He is a member of famous with the age 45 years old group.
Shadreck Chirikure Height, Weight & Measurements
At 45 years old, Shadreck Chirikure height not available right now. We will update Shadreck Chirikure's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Shadreck Chirikure Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Shadreck Chirikure worth at the age of 45 years old? Shadreck Chirikure’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from . We have estimated
Shadreck Chirikure's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Under Review |
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Pending |
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Timeline
As of 2020, his current project is focused on the precolonial urban landscapes in southern Africa, and how these deep history of challenges contribute to contemporary society. His work is focused at two World Heritage Sites, Great Zimbabwe and Mapungubwe. Understanding of the economies and social/trade networks of these significant sites is sorely lacking, without even a solid chronological framework. Through an extensive science-based analysis of material and biological remains, Chirikure's work seeks to place these sites in their African and international trade networks. The outcomes will enhance understanding of national heritage and roots through education in Africa and beyond.
Chirikure is a founding member of the South African Young Academy of Science, a member of the Board of Governors for the Arts Council of African Studies Association, and a member of the Advisory Council of the New York based Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. He won the Antiquity prize in both 2019, and in 2008 with Innocent Pikirayi.
Much of Chirikure's work is focused on integrating hard sciences with traditional archaeological and anthropological studies, to explore both ancient African technologies and how they contribute to political economies in both non-state and precolonial state systems. Chirikure’s work seeks to disrupt the hegemonic approach to african technologies, and their roles in society, using African philosophies to revise historically accepted concepts and reflect on the significance of African technology in the long durée. In his work, Chirikure reflects on how this affects Africa's place in the world now, and the place of the world in Africa, as exemplified in a lecture given as part of AfOx insaka 2019, entitled 'Why is contemporary Africa poor: insights from archaeology and deep history'.
Webber Ndoro, Shadreck Chirikure, Janette Deacon (eds). 2018. Managing Africa’s Heritage: Who Cares. Routledge.
Munyaradzi Manyanga and Shadreck Chirikure. 2017. Archives, Objects, Places and Landscapes: Multidisciplinary approaches to Decolonised Zimbabwean pasts. African Books Collective.
Chirikure, Shadreck. 2015. Metals in Past Societies. A Global Perspective on Indigenous African Metallurgy. Springer.
Chirikure, S., Manyanga, M., Pollard, A. M., Bandama, F., Mahachi, G., & Pikirayi, I. 2014. Zimbabwe culture before Mapungubwe: new evidence from Mapela Hill, south-western Zimbabwe. PLOS ONE 9(10), e111224.
Chirikure, S., Manyanga, M., Pikirayi, I., & Pollard, M. (2013). New pathways of sociopolitical complexity in Southern Africa. African Archaeological Review 30(4), 339-366.
He held a Mandela-Harvard Fellowship in 2012 at Harvard University's Hutchins Centre for African and African American Studies. He received the National Research Foundation of South Africa’s Presidential Award in 2012 for outstanding research by persons under the age of 40. Chirikure received the Association of Commonwealth Universities Fellowship in 2017, which he held at Linacre College, University of Oxford. He currently holds a British Academy Global Professorship within the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford, and a Visiting Fellow at St Cross College. Chirikure is also an honorary research associate at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research. In 2019 he delivered the Thirty-first McDonald Annual Lecture at the University of Cambridge.
He has published several monographs, including Indigenous Mining and Metallurgy in Africa (2010), and Metals in Past Societies. A Global Perspective on Indigenous African Metallurgy (2015), and numerous journal articles. He is the editor in chief of the Oxford Research Encyclopaedia of African Archaeology and one of the co-editors of Cambridge University Press’ History of Technology book series.
Chirikure, S. 2010. Indigenous mining and metallurgy in Africa. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press.
Chirikure, S., Manyanga, M., Ndoro, W., & Pwiti, G. 2010. Unfulfilled promises? Heritage management and community participation at some of Africa's cultural heritage sites. International Journal of Heritage Studies 16(1-2), 30-44.
Chirikure, S., Pwiti, G., Damm, C., Folorunso, C.A., Hughes, D.M., Phillips, C., Taruvinga, P., Chirikure, S. and Pwiti, G., 2008. Community involvement in archaeology and cultural heritage management: An assessment from case studies in Southern Africa and elsewhere. Current Anthropology 49(3), pp. 467–485.
Chirikure, S., & Pikirayi, I. 2008. Inside and outside the dry stone walls: revisiting the material culture of Great Zimbabwe. Antiquity 82(318), 976-993.
Chirikure, S. 2007. Metals in society: iron production and its position in Iron Age communities of southern Africa. Journal of Social Archaeology 7(1), 72-100.
Chirikure is a professor and previous Head of Department at the Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town. Chirikure’s directs the Archaeological Material Laboratory at the University of Cape Town, which studies pyrotechnology as practised by farming communities of the last 2000 years of sub-Saharan Africa. Research undertaken within the laboratory includes the role of mining and metallurgy in early state formation, modelling the evolution of pyrotechnology in sub-Saharan Africa over the past 2000 years, and innovation and demography in the evolution of socio-technical systems. Chirikure studies material from archaeological sites in southern African including Khami, Great Zimbabwe and Mapungubwe, as well as sites in Malawi, Nigeria, and Cameroon.
Shadreck Chirikure (born 1978) is a professor at the University of Cape Town, and holds a British Academy Global Professorship within the School of Archaeology at Oxford. He is a leading archaeologist, studying pyrotechnology and southern Africa.
Chirikure was born in Gutu District, Zimbabwe, in 1978. He studied for a BA and BA Honours Degrees at the University of Zimbabwe. Subsequently, he studied for a MA in Artefact Studies from the Institute of Archaeology, UCL followed by a PhD in Archaeology. His PhD thesis, received in 2005, was entitled Iron production in Iron Age Zimbabwe: Stagnation or innovation?, supervised by Thilo Rehren and Andrew Reid.