Matthew Douglas Adams
Dr. Matthew Douglas Adams, Director
Archaeologist, Egyptologist
Matthew Adams is a Senior Research Scholar at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, where he has directed archaeology at north Abydos since 1999. He holds a dual PhD in Anthropology and Egyptology from the University of Pennsylvania, where he began his fieldwork in the Middle East as an undergraduate and then graduate student in the early 1980s, including excavations in Turkey, Syria, and Egypt. He led his first excavation at Abydos in 1991, and since then he has directed excavations at many different areas of the site, from the predynastic to the late antique, and from the Abydos town site that was the subject of his PhD dissertation to the monumental cult enclosures of Egypt’s first kings. As Associate Director and Field Director of the Expedition from 1999 to 2017, in collaboration with Prof. David O’Connor, he led a range of initiatives that have redefined our understanding of the importance of Abydos in Egypt’s early history, the emergence of Egyptian kingship, and the transformation of the site into a religious center of national importance, in addition to directing a pioneering architectural conservation program at the Second Dynasty cult enclosure of King Khasekhemwy, known today as the Shunet el-Zebib. He has published, taught, and lectured widely on the archaeology of Egypt, and has been featured in The New Yorker, The New York Times, National Geographic Magazine, and a number of television documentaries. He recently edited the fourth volume of the Egypt at its Origins series, and has previously served on the Board of Governors of the American Research Center in Egypt and of the Egyptological Seminar of New York. He has worked as an archaeologist at Abydos for forty years and his most recent excavations have focused on the economic underpinnings of early royal activity at the site, including the re-discovery of the Abydos Royal Brewery in 2018, research which is currently supported by an NEH Archaeological and Ethnographic Field Research grant. His recent publications include “The Origins of Sacredness at Abydos” in Abydos: The Sacred Land at the Western Horizon (Peeters 2019) and “Abydos in Late Antiquity” in Abydos in the First Millennium AD (Peeters 2020). He can be reached over the website: www.abydos.org