Sanjyot Mehendale

Contact

(510) 643-5104
1995 University Ave., Ste 520F; 294 Social Sciences Building
Job title: 
Vice Chair, The Numata Center for Buddhist Studies; Lecturer
Department: 
Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures
Bio/CV: 

Dr. Sanjyot Mehendale is an archaeologist specializing in trade and cultural exchange of the early Common Era.  She received her Doctorandus degree in Indo-Iranian art and archaeology from the Rijksuniversity of Leiden, The Netherlands. In 1992, she entered the doctoral program at the University of California at Berkeley focusing on Eurasian trading networks.  In 1997, after extensive research at Musée Guimet in Paris and supported by a Mabelle McLeod Lewis Dissertation Fellowship, she completed a dissertation on the Begram (Afghanistan) objects, which included a reexamination of, and ultimately new interpretations about, the nature of the finds, as well as a complete catalogue of the extensive ivory and bone objects discovered at the site.  After completion of her dissertation, she began teaching on the Silk Roads as a Lecturer in UCB’s Department of Near Eastern Studies.  In 1999, she developed and became the co-director of a joint project with the Uzbek Institute of Archaeology in Samarkand to excavate sites in southern Sogdiana. The Uzbek-Berkeley Archaeological Mission’s work was supported by grants from the Stahl Fund and the Mellon Foundation. Recent research and writing projects have been supported by a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 2007, she was hired as a consultant by National Geographic Society to help structure the Afghanistan: Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul exhibition as well as to contribute to the accompanying catalogue. Since 1996, she has conducted archaeological research in Sri Lanka, including the excavation of a shipwreck off the southern coast of the island, looking into first Millennium CE maritime connections across the Indian Ocean.

For many years Dr. Mehendale has worked to develop Silk Road studies at Berkeley, starting with a Townsend Center for the Humanities-sponsored “Silk Road Working Group” (with Dr. Bruce Williams) and, more recently, the “Silk Road Initiative” housed at the university’s Center for Buddhist Studies. Her work on institutional collaborations includes outreach and academic programs developed with Cal Performances in conjunction with residencies by the Silk Road Ensemble (founded by cellist Yo Yo Ma) and, as a member of the Society for Asian Art’s Advisory Board, at San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum.

Sanjyot Mehendale is currently Chair of the Tang Center for Silk Road Studies(link is external) and Vice-Chair of the Numata Center for Buddhist Studies(link is external).

Research interests: 

Archaeology of Eurasian trading networks; Samarkand and southern Sogdiana; maritime archaeology; Indian Ocean trade