Valerie Maxfield


Valerie Maxfield FSA is a Roman archaeologist and emeritus Professor of Archaeology at the University of Exeter. She is a specialist in the archaeology of the Roman army and frontiers, and edits the Proceedings of the Devon Archaeological Society.

Academic career

Maxfield completed an undergraduate degree in History at the University of Leicester and completed a Phd at Durham University in 1972, at Trevelyan College, supervised by Brian Dobson. She studied at the British School at Rome, and was then appointed as a Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Exeter. Maxfield retired from the university in 2008, coinciding with Bryony Coles' retirement. To mark their departure, the archaeology department held a conference dedicated to them titled 'From Desert to Wetland'. Valerie Maxfield is currently an emeritus Professor of Archaeology at the University of Exeter.

Excavations

In 1972 Maxfield excavated the Roman temporary camp at Eskbank, revealing its entrance complex, and in 1975 a series of pits at the camp. She excavated the Roman fort of Camelon, Falkirk from 1975–1977, and discovered a new camp at Lochlands through excavations in 1980–1984. Maxfield has worked in the Eastern Desert of Egypt since 1987 and excavated at Mons Porphyrites with David Peacock in the 1990s. This led to a grant of £5,595 from the British Academy in 2005 to fund post-excavation work on the project.

Archaeological societies

Maxfield co-founded the Hadrianic society in 1971 with David Breeze and Brian Dobson and was elected as a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1978. Maxfield is a member of the Durham School of Archaeology. She has a longstanding involvement with both the Devon Archaeological Society and the Cornwall Archaeological Society, whose president she was in 2014. She is the current vice-president of the Devon Archaeological Society and edits the society's journal.

Selected publications