Geraint Dyfed Barri Jones was a classical scholar and archaeologist.
Background
Born in Street Helens to Welsh-speaking parents, he attended High Wycombe Royal Grammar School (where his father was the senior modern languages master and his mother also taught) from 1947–1954, and won a Welsh Foundation Scholarship to read classics at Jesus College, Oxford.
Education
Jesus College; Royal Grammar School, High Wycombe.
Career
He was elected to the Rome Scholarship for Classical Studies in 1959. From 1959-1962, Jones took part in the South Etruria Survey directed by John Bryan Ward-Perkins of the British School at Rome. After receiving his Doctorate.Phil from Oxford, Jones continued to work in Italy, analyzing aerial photographs of Apulia, leading to important discoveries at Foggia.
In 1964, he took an appointment at the University of Manchester.
While there, he conducted numerous field surveys and excavations of Roman sites in Lancashire, Cheshire, Cumbria and Derbyshire. He also worked at Dolaucothi, a Roman gold mine in Carmarthenshire, South Wales, his research there with Doctor Peter R Lewis transforming knowledge about this unique site.
He excavated the fort nearby, as well as at Carmarthen. Jones worked in North Africa for the Society for n Studies, discovering the city of Hadrianopolis by tracing its aqueduct.
He was very much involved in rescue archaeology throughout his career.
Jones was attracted to frontier areas, an interest reflected in his work. Among his students were John Lloyd, John Little, Nicholas Higham and David Mattingly.