Sir Barrington Windsor CunliffeCBE (b.
), known as Barry Cunliffe, was Professor of European Archaeology at the University of Oxford from 1972 to 2007.
Another site in southern England led him away from the Roman period. He began a long series of summer excavations (1969-88) of the Iron Agehill fort at Danebury in Hampshire and was subsequently involved in the Danebury Environs Programme (1989-95). Other sites he has worked on include Hengistbury Head in Dorset, Mount Batten in Devon, Le Cātel in Jersey and Le Yaudet in Brittany, reflecting his interest in the communities of Atlantic Europe during the Iron Age. His interest in Iron Age Britain and Europe generated a number of publications and he became an acknowledged authority on the Celts.
Cunliffe lives with his wife and two cats in Oxford.
Facing the Ocean: The Atlantic and Its Peoples, 8000 BC to AD 1500 (2001, Oxford University Press)
The Oxford Illustrated History of Prehistoric Europe (2001)
The Extraordinary Voyage of Pytheas the Greek: The Man Who Discovered Britain (2001), Walker & Co; ISBN 0-8027-1393-9 (2002 Penguin ed. with new post-script: ISBN 0-14-200254-2)
England's Landscape: The West (English Heritage 2006)