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André Patrício


 

Senior Researcher

 

Research Group

Representations, Discourses, Materialities, and Uses of the Past

 

 

ORCID

0000-0003-2304-9918

 

Ciência ID

A714-FAFB-F6E2

 

NOVA RESEARCH PORTAL

Profile

 

 

André Patrício is a licensed Clinical Psychologist and holds a Ph.D. in Egyptology, pursuing both disciplines with distinguished scholarly commitment, intellectual rigour, and professional excellence.

 

His work is distinguished by the rare integration of clinical practice and humanistic scholarship, to which he brings equal dedication, discernment, and academic distinction.

 

He is currently Senior Researcher at CHAM and is affiliated with the research group “Representations, Discourses, Materialities and Uses of the Past,” where he contributes to advanced interdisciplinary scholarship on the ancient world and its reception.

 

He has also served as invited lecturer in Egyptology at several international universities, where his teaching and academic engagement reflect a sustained commitment to the dissemination of specialised knowledge at the highest level.

 

He is a member of several distinguished international organisations in the fields of Psychology and Egyptology, including SEPI, APA, OPP, the International Association of Egyptologists, the Egypt Exploration Society, and the Portuguese Association of Egyptology. He also serves as a peer reviewer for international academic publications and, since 2021, has acted as Expert and Rapporteur for the European Commission’s Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellowships (MSCA-PF).

 

In addition to his research and teaching activities, he has organised several international conferences in the fields of History and Ancient History. His scholarly output, as reflected in his Ciência Vitae curriculum, centres on Ancient Egypt and encompasses themes such as religion, magic, protection, amulets, talismans, material culture, precious stones and metals, symbolism, kingship, legitimacy, dynastic rupture, archaeology, iconography, memory, temporality, the reception of antiquity, and ancient Egyptian furniture, with particular attention to figures and corpora such as Tutankhamun, Hetepheres, and the Papyrus Westcar.

 

 

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