Victoria Amorós Ruiz graduated in History (specialised in Archaeology) in 1997 at the University of Alicante. She worked in professional archaeology for public institutions and private companies. Her extensive background as a technician has allowed her to deal with a wide range of archaeological problems, strategies, and chronological frameworks. This experience in different fields has granted her to coordinate work teams related to archaeology and research, management, and dissemination of archaeological and cultural heritage. Thanks to this multisectoral profile, she has acquired deep expertise in managing and documenting field archaeology and archaeological materials. However, it has also provided her with extensive knowledge of material records from protohistory to the Middle Ages, allowing her to approach material record studies from different perspectives.
It is worth highlighting her training in the field of new technologies, which has significantly marked her profile as an intersectoral professional: Master's Degree in Design and Web Programming in 2007 (Arts Design School, Alicante), Postgraduate course in Application of geographic information technologies in Archaeology in 2012 (CSIC-Institute of Archaeology of Merida and University of Santiago de Compostela), Postgraduate course in Detecting and interpreting landscape transformations in 2013 (Università Degli Studi di Padova) and Postgraduate GIS Professional in 2020 (UNIGIS- University of Girona). All this training has led her to be an expert in managing, designing and disseminating cultural content and applying GIS tools in archaeology and heritage.
The interest in her main line of research, the study of archaeological materials and their social, economics, and cultural implications, was very present in her work as a technician. Her training as a researcher was developed over the years, parallel to her work as a professional archaeologist, and forged through her relationship with three multidisciplinary projects coordinated by three different institutions: El Tolmo de Minateda project, directed from the University of Alicante, in collaboration with the Museum of Albacete; Volubilis Project, led from the University College of London (UCL) and the Institut National des Sciences de l'Archéologie (INSAP) of Morocco and the Spatial Data Infrastructure project for the Archaeological Heritage of Castilla-La Mancha, coordinated by the University of Castilla-La Mancha.
Victoria Amorós Ruiz graduated in History (specialised in Archaeology) in 1997 at the University of Alicante. She worked in professional archaeology for public institutions and private companies. Her extensive background as a technician has allowed her to deal with a wide range of archaeological problems, strategies, and chronological frameworks. This experience in different fields has granted her to coordinate work teams related to archaeology and research, management, and dissemination of archaeological and cultural heritage. Thanks to this multisectoral profile, she has acquired deep expertise in managing and documenting field archaeology and archaeological materials. However, it has also provided her with extensive knowledge of material records from protohistory to the Middle Ages, allowing her to approach material record studies from different perspectives.
It is worth highlighting her training in the field of new technologies, which has significantly marked her profile as an intersectoral professional: Master's Degree in Design and Web Programming in 2007 (Arts Design School, Alicante), Postgraduate course in Application of geographic information technologies in Archaeology in 2012 (CSIC-Institute of Archaeology of Merida and University of Santiago de Compostela), Postgraduate course in Detecting and interpreting landscape transformations in 2013 (Università Degli Studi di Padova) and Postgraduate GIS Professional in 2020 (UNIGIS- University of Girona). All this training has led her to be an expert in managing, designing and disseminating cultural content and applying GIS tools in archaeology and heritage.
The interest in her main line of research, the study of archaeological materials and their social, economics, and cultural implications, was very present in her work as a technician. Her training as a researcher was developed over the years, parallel to her work as a professional archaeologist, and forged through her relationship with three multidisciplinary projects coordinated by three different institutions: El Tolmo de Minateda project, directed from the University of Alicante, in collaboration with the Museum of Albacete; Volubilis Project, led from the University College of London (UCL) and the Institut National des Sciences de l'Archéologie (INSAP) of Morocco and the Spatial Data Infrastructure project for the Archaeological Heritage of Castilla-La Mancha, coordinated by the University of Castilla-La Mancha.