Her interest in archaeology began as a young student at Woking Girls’ Grammar School in the 1950s. The school had a small collection of Roman and Egyptian artefacts which the young Anna curated, catalogued and redisplayed. In an interview with the Egypt Centre at Swansea University, she recalled, 'the artefacts were displayed in a shelved case in the main entrance hall of the school, and I loved looking after them. You are right in thinking that I compiled the first inventory, and indeed that the museum was a spur to my future as an archaeologist.'[3] She received her BA from Cardiff University and completed her PhD at the University of Edinburgh in 1970.[4]
Career
Beginning her career in the late 1960s, she has researched and published widely in academic and popular publications. In 1968, she married fellow archaeologist J N Graham Ritchie (died 2005) and the couple had two children.[5] She and her husband often collaborated on fieldwork, research and writing projects, including Scotland: Archaeology and Early History (1981), the Oxford Archaeological Guide to Scotland (1998) and The Ancient Monuments of Orkney, published in 1978.
In the 1970s she directed excavations at three major archaeological sites in Orkney - the Pictish and Viking farmstead at Buckquoy in Birsay, the Neolithic farmstead of Knap of Howar on Papa Westray and a Neolithic chambered cairn on the Holm of Papa Westray. As well as publishing widely in academic journals and books,[6] Ritchie has also written extensively for more popular publications. She has authored numerous guidebooks and publications for the HMSO and Historic Environment Scotland, covering topics such as Scottish Prehistory, Picts, Vikings, early Medieval sculpture and place-focused works on the archaeology of Iona, Orkney, Shetland, and Bute. She was a panellist on a 1971 episode of the television show Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, discussing the Viking Age. She has also acted as a consultant for the television series Time Team and Blood of the Vikings.[1]
In January 2022 The Scottish Society for Northern Studies and the Pictish Arts Society announced a conference to be held in her honour in March 2022.[9][10] The proceedings of the virtual conference are intended to be published as a festschrift, and the papers as delivered were made available to view online.[11]
Publications
Selected books
Ritchie, J.N.G. & A. (1972). Edinburgh and South East Scotland. Heinemann. ISBN978-0435329716
Ritchie, A. (1977). The Kingdom of the Picts. Chambers. ISBN978-0550755346
Ritchie, G. & Ritchie, A. (1981). Scotland: Archaeology and History. Thames & Hudson. ISBN9780748602919
Ritchie, A. (1985). ‘Orkney in the Pictish Kingdom’, in Renfrew, C (ed) The Prehistory of Orkney, 183–204. Edinburgh University Press.ISBN978-0748602384
Ritchie, A. (1988). Scotland BC: An Introduction to the Prehistoric Houses, Tombs, Ceremonial Monuments and Fortifications in the Care of the Secretary of State for Scotland. HMSO. ISBN978-0114934279
Ritchie, A. (1989). Picts: an introduction to the life of the Picts and the carved stones in the care of the Secretary of State for Scotland. HMSO. ISBN978-0114934910
Ritchie, A. & Breeze, D. J. (1991). Invaders of Scotland: Introduction to the Archaeology of the Romans, Scots, Angles and Vikings. HMSO. ISBN978-1900168779
Ritchie, A. (1993). Viking Scotland. Historic Scotland.ISBN978-0713473162
Ritchie, A. (1993). The Ancient Monuments of Orkney. Historic Scotland. ISBN978-0114957346
Ritchie, A. (ed) (1994). Govan and its early medieval sculpture. Sutton. ISBN978-0750907170
Ritchie, A. (1999). Govan and its carved stones. Pinkfoot Press. ISBN978-1874012221
Ritchie, A. (ed.) (2000). Neolithic Orkney in its European Context. McDonald Institute Monograph, Cambridge. ISBN9781902937045
Ritchie, A. & Fisher, I. (2001). Iona Abbey and Nunnery. Historic Scotland. ISBN9781903570227
Ritchie, A. (2004). Hogback gravestones at Govan and beyond. Friends of Govan Old. ISBN978-0954532116
Ritchie, A. (ed.) (2005). Kilellan Farm, Ardnave, Islay: Excavations of a prehistoric to early medieval site by Colin Burgess and others 1954–1976 : Kilellan Farm, Ardnave, Islay: Excavations of a prehistoric to early medieval site by Colin Burgess and others 1954–1976. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. ISBN9780903903356
Downes, J. & Ritchie A. (eds) (2006). Sea Change: Orkney and Northern Europe in the Later Iron Age AD 300-800. Orkney Heritage Society. ISBN978-1874012382
Ritchie, A, Scott, I. G. & Gray, T. E. (2006). People of Early Scotland. From Contemporary Images. Pinkfoot Press. ISBN978-1874012504
Scott, I. G. & Ritchie, A. (2009). Pictish and Viking-Age Carvings from Shetland. RCAHMS. ISBN978-1902419633
^Engel, Dr Dulcie (22 July 2020). "The Woking Loan at the Egypt Centre"(PDF). Egypt Centre Collection Blog. Archived(PDF) from the original on 31 January 2022. Retrieved 31 January 2022.