Durham University's Sudan Archive was founded in 1957 by former members ofthe Sudan Government under the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium, and by staff fromDurham University, including the first director of the Oriental Museum, T.W.Thacker (Cory & Forbes 1983). Since the initial call for donations, theSudan Archive has now collected 800 boxes of documents and photographs,mainly from former Sudan Government officials. This material now forms anintegral part of Durham University Library's special collections (SudanArchive Catalogue). The archive holds a wide variety of documents, frompersonal communications and photographs, to official reports mainlypertaining to political and social issues from early twentieth-century Sudanand neighbouring countries. It also includes a wealth of material relevantto the archaeology of both the Sudan and neighbouring countries (e.g. Egypt,Israel, Syria) (Figure 1), yet only a limited amount of the potentiallyrelevant material has been used by archaeologists. The Sudan Archive remainsa largely untapped resource for archaeological research. This situation isprobably to be explained partly by the description of the archive as ahistorical and political collection; moreover, a search of the existingcatalogue for the term ‘archaeology’ returns only four results, whereasabout 700 documents are directly relevant to the subject. An additionalproblem is that the spellings of both archaeological sites and locations areinconsistent; for example, Meroë also appears as Meroe, Merowe and Bakarwiyyeh. To remedy these issuesand to make the material more accessible, a recent project has identifiedover 1000 individual references to archaeological sites or themes andcatalogued them in a database (Figure 2).