Abercromby Professor of Archaeology: 1927–1946 In 1927, the
University of Edinburgh offered Childe the post of
Abercromby Professor of Archaeology, a new position established in the bequest of the prehistorian
Lord Abercromby. Although sad to leave London, Childe took the job, moving to
Edinburgh in September 1927. Aged 35, Childe became the "only academic prehistorian in a teaching post in Scotland". Many Scottish archaeologists disliked Childe, regarding him as an outsider with no specialism in Scottish prehistory; he wrote to a friend that "I live here in an atmosphere of hatred and envy". He nevertheless made friends in Edinburgh, including archaeologists like
W. Lindsay Scott,
Alexander Curle,
J. G. Callender, and
Walter Grant, as well as non-archaeologists like the physicist
Charles Galton Darwin, becoming godfather to Darwin's youngest son. Initially lodging at
Liberton, he moved into the semi-residential Hotel de Vere on Eglinton Crescent. At Edinburgh University, Childe focused on research rather than teaching. He was reportedly kind to his students but had difficulty talking to large audiences; many students were confused that his
BSc degree course in archaeology was structured counter-chronologically, dealing with the more recent
Iron Age first before progressing backward to the
Palaeolithic. Founding the Edinburgh League of Prehistorians, he took his more enthusiastic students on excavations and invited guest lecturers to visit. An early proponent of
experimental archaeology, he involved his students in his experiments; in 1937 he used this method to investigate the
vitrification process evident at several Iron Age forts in northern Britain. His first student to get professional employment in archaeology was
Margaret E. B. Simpson, in 1930, who was also the first women professional archaeologist in Scotland. Childe regularly travelled to London to visit friends, among whom was
Stuart Piggott, another influential British archaeologist who succeeded Childe as Edinburgh's Abercromby Professor. Another friend was
Grahame Clark, whom Childe befriended and encouraged in his research. The trio were elected onto the committee of the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia. At Clark's suggestion, in 1935 they used their influence to convert it into a nationwide organisation, the
Prehistoric Society, of which Childe was elected president. Membership of the group grew rapidly; in 1935 it had 353 members and by 1938 it had 668. Childe spent much time in continental Europe and attended many conferences there, having learned several European languages. In 1935, he first visited the
Soviet Union, spending 12 days in
Leningrad and
Moscow; impressed with the
socialist state, he was particularly interested in the social role of Soviet archaeology. Returning to Britain, he became a vocal Soviet sympathiser and avidly read the CPGB's
Daily Worker, although was heavily critical of certain Soviet policies, particularly the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact with
Nazi Germany. His socialist convictions led to an early denunciation of European
fascism, and he was outraged by the
Nazi co-option of prehistoric archaeology to glorify their own conceptions of an Aryan racial heritage. Supportive of the British government's decision to fight the fascist powers in the
Second World War, he thought it probable that he was
on a Nazi blacklist and made the decision to drown himself in a canal should the Nazis conquer Britain. Though opposing fascist Germany and Italy, he also criticised the imperialist, capitalist governments of the United Kingdom and United States: he repeatedly described the latter as being full of "loathsome fascist hyenas". This did not prevent him from visiting the U.S. In 1936 he addressed a Conference of Arts and Sciences marking the tercentenary of
Harvard University; there, the university awarded him an
honorary Doctor of Letters degree. He returned in 1939, lecturing at Harvard, the
University of California, Berkeley, and the
University of Pennsylvania.
Excavations in
Orkney, the site excavated by Childe 1927–30 Childe's university position meant he was obliged to undertake archaeological excavations, something he loathed and believed he did poorly. Students agreed, but recognised his "genius for interpreting evidence". Unlike many contemporaries, he was scrupulous with writing up and publishing his findings, producing almost annual reports for the
Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and, unusually, ensuring that he acknowledged the help of every digger. His best-known excavation was undertaken from 1928 to 1930 at
Skara Brae in the
Orkney Islands. Having uncovered a well-preserved Neolithic village, in 1931 he published the excavation results in a book titled
Skara Brae. He made an error of interpretation, erroneously attributing the site to the Iron Age. During the excavation, Childe got on particularly well with the locals; for them, he was "every inch the professor" because of his eccentric appearance and habits. In 1932, Childe, collaborating with the
anthropologist C. Daryll Forde, excavated two Iron Age
hillforts at
Earn's Hugh on the
Berwickshire coast, while in June 1935 he excavated a
promontory fort at
Larriban near to
Knocksoghey in Northern Ireland. Together with Wallace Thorneycroft, another Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Childe excavated two vitrified Iron Age forts in Scotland, at
Finavon,
Angus (1933–34) and at
Rahoy,
Argyllshire (1936–37). In 1938, he and Walter Grant oversaw excavations at the Neolithic settlement of
Rinyo; their investigation ceased during the Second World War, but resumed in 1946.
Publications Childe continued writing and publishing books on archaeology, beginning with a series of works following on from
The Dawn of European Civilisation and
The Aryans by compiling and synthesising data from across Europe. First was
The Most Ancient Near East (1928), which assembled information from across Mesopotamia and India, setting a background from which the spread of farming and other technologies into Europe could be understood. This was followed by
The Danube in Prehistory (1929) which examined the archaeology along the
Danube river, recognising it as the natural boundary dividing the Near East from Europe; Childe believed it was via the Danube that new technologies travelled westward. Although Childe had used culture-historical approaches in earlier publications,
The Danube in Prehistory was his first publication to provide a specific definition of the concept of an
archaeological culture, revolutionising the theoretical approach of British archaeology. Childe's next book,
The Bronze Age (1930), dealt with the
Bronze Age in Europe, and displayed his increasing adoption of Marxist theory as a means of understanding how society functioned and changed. He believed metal was the first indispensable article of commerce, and that metal-smiths were therefore full-time professionals who lived off the
social surplus. In 1933, Childe travelled to Asia, visiting Iraq—a place he thought "great fun"—and India, which he felt was "detestable" due to the hot weather and extreme poverty. Touring archaeological sites in the two countries, he opined that much of what he had written in
The Most Ancient Near East was outdated, going on to produce
New Light on the Most Ancient Near East (1935), in which he applied his Marxist-influenced ideas about the economy to his conclusions. After publishing
Prehistory of Scotland (1935), Childe produced one of the defining books of his career,
Man Makes Himself (1936). Influenced by Marxist views of history, Childe argued that the usual distinction between (pre-literate) prehistory and (literate) history was a
false dichotomy and human society has progressed through a series of technological, economic, and social revolutions. These included the
Neolithic Revolution, when hunter-gatherers began settling in permanent farming communities, through to the
Urban Revolution, when society moved from small towns to the first cities, and up to more recent times, when the
Industrial Revolution changed the nature of production. After the outbreak of the Second World War, Childe was unable to travel across Europe, instead focusing on writing
Prehistoric Communities of the British Isles (1940). Childe's pessimism regarding the war's outcome led him to believe that "European civilization—capitalist and
Stalinist alike—was irrevocably headed for a Dark Age". In this state of mind he produced a sequel to
Man Makes Himself titled
What Happened in History (1942), an account of human history from the Palaeolithic through to the fall of the
Roman Empire. Although
Oxford University Press offered to publish the work, he released it through
Penguin Books because they could sell it at a cheaper price, something he believed pivotal in providing knowledge for those he called "the masses". This was followed by two short works,
Progress and Archaeology (1944) and
The Story of Tools (1944), the latter an explicitly Marxist text written for the
Young Communist League.
Institute of Archaeology, London: 1946–1956 , excavated by Childe 1954–55 In 1946, Childe left Edinburgh to take up the position as director and professor of European prehistory at the
Institute of Archaeology (IOA) in London. Anxious to return to London, he had kept silent over his disapproval of government policies so he would not be prevented from getting the job. He took up residence in the
Isokon building near to
Hampstead. Located in
St John's Lodge in the Inner Circle of
Regent's Park, the IOA was founded in 1937, largely by the archaeologist
Mortimer Wheeler, but until 1946 relied primarily on volunteer lecturers. Childe's relationship with the conservative Wheeler was strained, for their personalities were very different; Wheeler was an extrovert who pursued the limelight, was an efficient administrator, and was intolerant of others' shortcomings, while Childe lacked administrative skill, and was tolerant of others. Childe was popular among the institute's students, who saw him as a kindly eccentric; they commissioned a bust of Childe from
Marjorie Maitland Howard. His lecturing was nevertheless considered poor, as he often mumbled and walked into an adjacent room to find something while continuing to talk. He further confused his students by referring to the socialist states of eastern Europe by their full official titles, and by referring to towns by their Slavonic names rather than the names with which they were better known in English. He was deemed better at giving tutorials and seminars, where he devoted more time to interacting with his students. As Director, Childe was not obliged to excavate, though he did undertake projects at the Orkney Neolithic burial tombs of
Quoyness (1951) and
Maes Howe (1954–55). In 1949, he and Crawford resigned as fellows of the
Society of Antiquaries. They did so to protest the selection of
James Mann—keeper of the
Tower of London's armouries—as the society's president, believing Wheeler (a professional archaeologist) was a better choice. Childe joined the editorial board of the periodical
Past & Present, founded by Marxist historians in 1952. During the early 1950s, he also became a board member for
The Modern Quarterly—later
The Marxist Quarterly—working alongside the board's chairman Rajani Palme Dutt, his best friend and flatmate from his Oxford days. He authored occasional articles for Palme Dutt's socialist journal, the
Labour Monthly, but disagreed with him over the
Hungarian Revolution of 1956; Palme Dutt defended the Soviet Union's decision to quash the revolution using military force, but Childe, like many Western socialists, strongly opposed it. The event made Childe abandon faith in the Soviet leadership, but not in socialism or Marxism. He retained a love of the Soviet Union, having visiting on multiple occasions; he was also involved with a CPGB satellite body, the Society for Cultural Relations with the USSR, and served as president of its National History and Archaeology Section from the early 1950s until his death. In April 1956, Childe was awarded the Gold Medal of the Society of Antiquaries for his services to archaeology. He was invited to lecture in the United States on multiple occasions, by
Robert Braidwood,
William Duncan Strong, and
Leslie White, but the
U.S. State Department barred him from entering the country due to his Marxist beliefs. While working at the institute, Childe continued writing and publishing books dealing with archaeology.
History (1947) promoted a Marxist view of the past and reaffirmed Childe's belief that prehistory and literate history must be viewed together, while
Prehistoric Migrations (1950) displayed his views on moderate diffusionism. In 1946 he also published a paper in the
Southwestern Journal of Anthropology. This was "Archaeology and Anthropology", which argued that the disciplines of archaeology and anthropology should be used in tandem, an approach that would be widely accepted in the decades following his death.
Retirement and death: 1956–1957 In mid-1956, Childe retired as IOA director a year prematurely. European archaeology had rapidly expanded during the 1950s, leading to increasing specialisation and making the synthesising that Childe was known for increasingly difficult. That year, the institute was moving to
Gordon Square, Bloomsbury, and Childe wanted to give his successor,
W. F. Grimes, a fresh start in the new surroundings. To commemorate his achievements, the
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society published a
Festschrift edition on the last day of his directorship containing contributions from friends and colleagues all over the world, something that touched Childe deeply. Upon his retirement, he told many friends he planned to return to Australia, visit his relatives, and commit suicide; he was terrified of becoming old, senile, and a burden on society, and suspected he had
cancer. Subsequent commentators suggested that a core reason for his suicidal desires was a loss of faith in Marxism following the Hungarian Revolution and
Nikita Khrushchev's
denouncement of Joseph Stalin, although
Bruce Trigger dismissed this explanation, noting that while Childe was critical of Soviet foreign policy, he never saw the state and Marxism as synonymous. from Govetts Leap, the site where Childe chose to end his life Sorting out his affairs, Childe donated most of his library and all of his estate to the institute. After a February 1957 holiday visiting archaeological sites in Gibraltar and Spain, he sailed to Australia, reaching Sydney on his 65th birthday. Here, the University of Sydney, which had once barred him from working there, awarded him an honorary degree. He travelled around the country for six months, visiting family members and old friends, but was unimpressed by Australian society, believing it reactionary, increasingly suburban, and poorly educated. Looking into Australian prehistory, he found it a profitable field for research, and lectured to archaeological and leftist groups on this and other topics, taking to Australian radio to criticise academic racism towards
Indigenous Australians. Writing personal letters to many friends, he sent one to Grimes, requesting that it not be opened until 1968. In it, he described how he feared old age and stated his intention to take his own life, remarking that "life ends best when one is happy and strong". On 19 October 1957, Childe went to the area of Govett's Leap in
Blackheath, an area of the Blue Mountains where he had grown up. Leaving his hat, spectacles, compass, pipe, and
Mackintosh raincoat on the cliffs, he fell 1000 feet (300 m) to his death. A coroner ruled his death as accidental, but his death was recognised as suicide when his letter to Grimes was published in the 1980s. His remains were cremated at the
Northern Suburbs Crematorium, and his name added to a small family plaque in the Crematorium Gardens. Following his death, an "unprecedented" level of tributes and memorials were issued by the archaeological community, all, according to Ruth Tringham, testifying to his status as Europe's "greatest prehistorian and a wonderful human being". ==Archaeological theory==