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John Mck. Camp II ... Benaki Museum ... Mouseio Benaki Supplement 3 87-97 Offprint ... 2008 |
Benaki Museum ... Mouseio Benaki Supplement 4 ... 2008 |
Schweigert, Eugene ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 6.2 2 317-332 10.2307_146522 ... 1937 |
Lehmann, Karl ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 14.3 3 259-269 10.2307_146711 ... 1945 |
Bonner, Campbell ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 20.4 4 301-345 10.2307_146801 ... 1951 |
Palagia, Olga ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 64.4 4 493-501 10.2307_148500 ... 1995 |
Immerwahr, Sara Anderson ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 38.2 2 150-156 10.2307_147411 ... 1969 |
Vanderpool, Eugene ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 36.1 1 108-110 10.2307_147625 ... 1967 |
Andrianou, Dimitra ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 75.4 4 561-584 ... 2006 |
Brecoulaki, Hariclia Zaitoun, Caroline Stocker, Sharon R. Davis, Jack L. Karydas, Andreas G. Colombini, Maria Perla Bartolucci, Ugo ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 77.3 3 363-397 ... 2008 |
Amyx, Darrell A. Lawrence, Patricia ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... In the first section of this book, Amyx catalogues and discusses more than 200 fragments of Archaic Corinthian pottery with figure decoration, selected from those previously unpublished or inadequately ... 1975 |
Broneer, O ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... The calyx-krater of Exekias, first published in 1937,1 was discovered at the bottom of a well in the American School excavations on the North slope of the Acropolis in Athens. The circumstances of discovery ... 1956 ... The calyx-krater of Exekias, first published in 1937,1 was discovered at the bottom of a well in the American School excavations on the North slope of the Acropolis in Athens. The circumstances of discovery indicate that someone had carried down the shattered krater from the Acropolis for the express purpose of throwing it into the well, which was then abandoned as a source of water, like several other wells on the North Slope. ... After the well had been excavated and the possibility of finding more pieces seemed remote, the vase was restored and placed on exhibit in the temporary Agora Museum.3 The following season, however, brought to light two more fragments which were recognized as belonging to the calyx-krater. ... Verdelis for permission to republish the photographs on Plate 51, b-d, which I received from the files of the Archaelolgical Society in Athens through the kindness of Miss Artemisia Giannoulatou; and to Miss Alison Frantz for taking the photographs for Plates 50 and 51, a. |
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