1901 in archaeology
Below are notable events in archaeology that occurred in 1901.
Events
- British School at Rome established.
Excavations
- KV44 at the Valley of the Kings, Egypt by Howard Carter and Donald P. Ryan.
- Excavations and renovations at Mitla conducted by Leopoldo Batres.
- Excavation of the Minoan town at Gournia by Harriet Boyd-Hawes and Blanche Wheeler Williams begins.
Finds
- December: Code of Hammurabi at Susa.
- Ivory Bangle Lady in York, England, the skeleton and grave goods of a later fourth century high-status, possibly Christian, inhabitant of Eboracum, much later identified as of mixed race.
- Heracles of Antikythera in the Antikythera wreck, Greece.
Miscellaneous
- Edward Herbert Thompson buys the ruins of Chichen Itza for 75 United States dollars
- General Land Office special agent S. J. Holsinger recommends creating a national park to preserve archaeological sites in Chaco Canyon
Births
- February 15 – André Parrot, French archaeologist of the Near East
- July 17 – Theresa Goell, American archaeologist of the Near East
- October 18 – A. Ledyard Smith, American archaeologist of the Americas
- October 27 – Aage Roussell, Danish archaeologist of Greenland
- November 17 – Spyridon Marinatos, Greek archaeologist of the Aegean Bronze Age
- Charles Green, English archaeologist