Gertrude Caton ThompsonFBA (1 February 1888 – 18 April 1985)[1] was an English archaeologist at a time when participation by women in the discipline was uncommon. Much of her archaeological work was conducted in Egypt. However, she also worked on expeditions in Zimbabwe, Malta, and South Arabia.
Her notable contributions to the field of archaeology include creating a technique for excavating archaeological sites and information on Paleolithic to Predynastic civilizations in Zimbabwe and Egypt. Caton Thompson held many official positions in organizations such as the Prehistoric Society and the Royal Anthropological Institute.[2][page needed]
Early life
Gertrude Caton Thompson was born to William Caton Thompson and Ethel Gertrude Page in 1888 in London, England.[3] She attended private schools in Paris and in Eastbourne, including the Links School, run by Miss Hawtrey.[1][4] Her interest in archaeology began on a trip to Egypt with her mother in 1911, followed by a series of lectures on Ancient Greece given by Sarah Paterson at the British Museum.[5] An inheritance received in 1912 helped ensure her financial independence and support her later excavations.[6]
In 1921, along with Margaret Murray, Gertrude Caton Thompson worked at the excavation of the megalithic temple of Borg en Nadur near St. George's Bay in Malta. Her responsibilities included investigating the caves near the temple searching for neanderthal skulls as evidence for a land bridge between Malta and the continent of Africa. Though she did not find evidence to support this theory, the excavation yielded other notable artifacts, such as Bronze Age pottery that closely paralleled Sicilian styles of the same period.
Work in Egypt
During the 1920s she worked as an archaeologist, primarily in Egypt for the British School of Archaeology Egypt, although she also conducted fieldwork in Malta. In Egypt she participated in excavations at a number of sites including Abydos,[9]El-Badari,[10] and Qau el Kebir.[11] Caton Thompson took a special interest in all aspects of Prehistoric Egypt and was one of the first archaeologists to look at the full-time spectrum from the Palaeolithic through to Predynastic Egypt.[6] Caton Thompson not only found a number of archaeological artifacts from Egypt, she also organized their display at the Egyptian Exhibition in England.[7] Many of these finds are now in the British Museum's permanent collection,[12] with smaller collections in the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford and the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.[4]
While working in the Badari region 1923–24, she explored prehistoric settlement remains at Hemamieh. Caton Thompson's work at the site was distinguished by its meticulousness. Caton Thompson began her work by organizing the site into ten by thirty foot intervals.[7] She carefully excavated in arbitrary six-inch levels, and recorded the exact position of each artifact.[10] Along with her excavation techniques, Caton Thompson was also the first to use air surveys to locate archaeological sites.[6] Such approaches to excavation were in many respects a generation ahead of her time and "sets her apart from her contemporaries and the majority of her successors".[13]
In 1925, Caton Thompson and the geologist Elinor Wight Gardner began the first archaeological and geological survey of the northern Faiyum,[14] where they sought to correlate ancient lake levels with archaeological stratification. Caton Thompson found the earliest farming civilization to date in the Fayum region of Egypt, estimated to about 4000 B.C. They continued working in the Faiyum over the next two years for the Royal Anthropological Institute where they discovered two previously unknown Neolithic cultures, mainly based on evidence from their Kom K and Kom W excavations.[15]
Caton Thompson and Wight Gardner also worked on prehistoric sites at Kharga Oasis during three expeditions from 1930 to 1933. Caton Thompson had made her first visit there in 1928 during her expedition to the Zimbabwe excavations. Since the Kharga Scarp contained many Paleolithic sites, Caton Thompson was able to excavate many implements used by those civilizations using meticulous soil scrutiny and how she noted where objects were positioned in relation to each other. This approach revolutionised how archaeological sites were surveyed and studied.[16] The flints she bought back to London are permanently housed in the Institute of Archaeology in London.[citation needed]
Her publication of "Kharga Oasis in Prehistory" was the first publication of the new Athlone Press of the University of London. She determined that the Kharga Scarp contained water without rainfall, which helped to supply water to a Neolithic civilization. This led to research more broadly on the palaeolithic civilizations of North Africa, which Caton Thompson published in 1952.[17]
Great Zimbabwe
In 1928, the British Academy invited Caton Thompson to investigate the origins of ruins in south-eastern Zimbabwe, near Lake Mutirikwe. The site contained multiple buildings within three sets of structures.[7] Caton Thompson assembled an all female expedition for the Zimbabwe excavations, which was the first of its kind.
Known since the 16th century, Great Zimbabwe had been previously excavated by James Theodore Bent and David Randall-MacIver and there was debate as to whether the site was the work of Africans (MacIver's view) or of some other civilisation. Caton Thompson used ceramics, which were similar to what modern villagers were using, and structures such as terrace walls to determine who built the structures from the site. Working with Kathleen Kenyon, Caton Thompson's excavations led her to the view that Zimbabwe was the product of a "native civilisation". The assertion attracted considerable press attention and was received negatively by many within the archaeological community. She received hate mail from Victor Loret and Alfred Charles Auguste Foucher, whose views on the Great Zimbabwe she challenged.[18] Caton Thompson claimed to keep hostile letters from local experts in a file marked "insane".[6] Modern archaeologists now agree that the city was the product of a Shona-speaking African civilisation.[19][20]
Later life
In 1932, she employed Mary Leakey to illustrate her book The Desert Fayum, greatly influencing her later career in palaeoanthropology.[21] Towards the end of 1937 Caton Thompson and Elinor Gardner, accompanied by Freya Stark, initiated the first systematic excavation in the Yemen at Hadhramaut (coincidentally, also a region explored by Theodore Bent).[22] However, relations between Caton Thompson and Stark were notoriously strained, with Stark deriding an anonymous but identifiable female archaeologist in her book A Winter in Arabia in 1940.[23][24]
Caton Thompson retired from fieldwork after the Second World War.[6] A long time friend of Dorothy Hoare, a colleague from Cambridge, Caton Thompson bought and shared a house with Hoare. After Hoare married Jose "Toty" M. de Navarro, son of the American actress Mary Anderson, and himself another Cambridge lecturer in archaeology, the Navarros continued to share the house with Caton Thompson. When she and the Navarros retired from academic life in 1956, Caton Thompson moved with them to their home in Broadway, Worcestershire - Court Farm.[25] Caton Thompson went on to have her memoirs released as an autobiography entitled "Mixed Memoirs" in 1983. She would reside with them and their son, Michael for the rest of her life.[7] She died in 1985, in her 97th year at Broadway, Worcestershire.
Awards and honours
Caton Thompson was awarded the Cuthbert Peek award of the Royal Geographical Society in 1932.[3] She was also the first woman to receive the Rivers Medal from the Royal Anthropological Institute in 1934.[7]
In 1938 she was offered the post of Disney Professor of Archaeology at Cambridge but rejected the role which was subsequently accepted by Dorothy Garrod.[26] However, she was a research fellow at Newnham College, Cambridge in 1923 and honorary fellow from 1934 to 1945, receiving an honorary Litt. D. in 1954.
Guy Brunton, Gertrude Caton Thompson, The Badarian civilisation and predynastic remains near Badari, British School of Archaeology in Egypt, London 1928.
The Zimbabwe Culture, 1931; F. Cass, 1970
Gertrude Caton Thompson, Elinor Wight Gardner The Desert Fayum, Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1934.
The Tombs and Moon Temple of Hureidha (Hadhramaut), Oxford for the Society of Antiquaries, 1944
Kharga Oasis in Prehistory, University of London, 1952
^Petrie, W. M. F. (1925). Tombs of the Courtiers and Oxyrhynkhos. London: British School of Archaeology in Egypt.
^ abBrunton, Guy, and Thompson, Gertrude Caton. (1928) The Badarian Civilisation and Predynastic Remains Near Badari. London: British School of Archaeology in Egypt.
^Petrie, W. M. F. (1930). Antaeopolis. The Tombs of Qau. London: British School of Archaeology in Egypt.
^Champion, S (1998). "Women in British Archaeology". In Magarita Díaz-Andreu, Marie Louise Stig Sorensen (ed.). Excavating Women: A History of Women in European Archaeology. Routledge. pp. 175–198.