[7] Her publications include articles, edited volumes and monographs on historiography, ancient portraiture and urban archaeology as well as themes in the intersecting fields between humanities and natural sciences.
[8] Rubina Raja received her DPhil degree from the University of Oxford in 2005 (Lincoln College) with a thesis on urban development and regional identities in the eastern Roman provinces under the supervision of Professors R.R.R.
[12] Since 2015, she directs Centre for Urban Network Evolutions based at Aarhus University,[13] which is the largest research initiative within the humanities in Denmark.
The centre has pioneered work on urban development, high definition archaeology and network studies of societies from the late Hellenistic into the Medieval periods geographically covering regions from Northern Europe, across the Mediterranean to the East Coast of Africa.
[20] Rubina Raja is a member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters[21] as well as the Academia Europaea.
[42] Rubina Raja studied Classical Archaeology, Italian language, Cultural Communication and Journalism at the University of Copenhagen in from 1995 to 1999.
Her dissertation was entitled Urban development and regional identity in the eastern Roman provinces, 50 BC – AD 250: Aphrodisias, Ephesos, Athens, Gerasa and was supervised by R.R.R.