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Jean-François Jarrige

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Parent: Mehrgarh Hop 4
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Jean-François Jarrige
NameJean-François Jarrige
Birth date24 December 1940
Birth placeCharenton-le-Pont, France
Death date5 April 2014
Death placeParis, France
OccupationArchaeologist
Known forExcavations at Mehrgarh, director of Musée Guimet

Jean-François Jarrige was a French archaeologist and curator noted for his work on South Asian prehistory and for directing major French museum and research institutions. He played a leading role in excavations at Mehrgarh that reshaped understanding of Neolithic and Chalcolithic cultures in South Asia, and he directed the Musée Guimet and influenced research relations between France and Pakistan. Jarrige’s career bridged field archaeology, curatorship, and international collaboration across institutions such as the French National Centre for Scientific Research and the École pratique des hautes études.

Early life and education

Born in Charenton-le-Pont in 1940, Jarrige undertook higher studies in archaeology and prehistory at French institutions including the École normale supérieure and the Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne. He trained under prominent scholars connected to the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle and the Centre national de la recherche scientifique, aligning his research with specialists in Near Eastern archaeology and South Asian studies. Early academic influences included interactions with figures from the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres and colleagues involved in projects in Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.

Archaeological career

Jarrige joined the CNRS and became associated with research groups focused on the prehistoric and protohistoric periods of Central Asia and South Asia. He developed collaborative ties with archaeological teams from the British Museum, the American Institute of Pakistani Studies, and the Institute of Archaeology, University of Oxford, promoting joint fieldwork and comparative studies with scholars from the University of Cambridge and the University of Pennsylvania. As a curator and director at the Musée Guimet, he curated exhibitions linking collections from the National Museum, New Delhi, the Louvre Museum, and the Victoria and Albert Museum, emphasizing material culture from the Indus Valley Civilization and early agricultural communities.

Major excavations and discoveries

Jarrige is best known for directing long-term excavations at Mehrgarh in present-day Balochistan (then West Pakistan), where his team uncovered evidence for early sedentism, ceramic production, and craft specialization that predated and informed models of the Indus Valley Civilization. The Mehrgarh work produced stratified deposits, burial assemblages, and early agricultural remains comparable to sites such as Çatalhöyük, Tepe Hissar, and Bannu. Jarrige’s excavations recovered painted pottery, aceramic levels, and evidence for early domestication of zebu cattle and cultivation of millet and barley, contributing to debates with researchers from the University of Cambridge and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. His fieldwork also engaged with contemporaneous projects at Harappa, Mohenjo-daro, Shortugai, and sites investigated by teams from the Archaeological Survey of India and the Smithsonian Institution.

Publications and scholarly impact

Jarrige authored and co-edited monographs and articles published in venues associated with the École pratique des hautes études, the Journal of Archaeological Science, and collective volumes produced by the British Academy. His publications addressed ceramic typology, mortuary practices, and early metallurgy, dialoguing with scholarship by Mortimer Wheeler, Sir John Marshall, Stuart Piggott, and contemporaries such as Jonathan Mark Kenoyer and Nicholas Marr. Jarrige’s synthesis influenced comparative frameworks employed by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, the Peabody Museum, and the Max Planck Gesellschaft, and his work was cited in major syntheses of South Asian archaeology and global studies of Neolithic transitions.

Awards and honours

Over his career, Jarrige received recognition from French and international bodies including honours from the Legion of Honour system and awards linked to the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. He was an elected member or corresponding fellow in scholarly organizations such as the Société préhistorique française and maintained honorary associations with the Pakistan Institute of Archaeology and the British Academy. His curatorial leadership at the Musée Guimet earned him distinctions in museum and cultural diplomacy, and he was frequently invited to lecture at institutions like the Collège de France, the University of Oxford, and the School of Oriental and African Studies.

Personal life and legacy

Jarrige’s legacy includes not only the stratigraphic records from Mehrgarh but also the institutional links he fostered among the CNRS, the Musée Guimet, and South Asian archaeological services such as the Department of Archaeology and Museums (Pakistan). Colleagues and students from the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales and the Université Paris Nanterre continued projects he initiated, while exhibitions he organized strengthened collections exchange with the National Museum of Pakistan and the National Museum, New Delhi. Jarrige died in Paris in 2014, and his contributions remain central to contemporary discussions by scholars at the University of Cambridge, Harvard University, Stanford University, and institutions engaged in the archaeology of early South Asian civilizations.

Category:French archaeologists Category:1940 births Category:2014 deaths