"Type","dc-subject","dc-date","dc-creator","Collection","UserLevel","dc-description","Icon","Redirect","dc-title","Id","Chronology","Name","dc-publisher" "Card","","","","Agora","","","Agora:Card:P-12295-1::/Agora/Cards/P 12xxx/P-12295-1.jpg::2048::1412","","","Agora:Card:P-12295-1","","P 12295","" "Drawing","","","John W. Hayes","Agora","","","Agora:Drawing:DA 10013::/Agora/Architecture/DAs/10000-10999/DA 10013.jpg::0::0","","","Agora:Drawing:DA 10013","","PD 3083-307; PD 3083-308; PD 3083-309; PD 3083-310; PD 3083-311; PD 3083-312; PD 3083-313; PD 3083-314; PD 3083-315; PD 3083-316; PD 3083-317; PD 3083-318; PD 3083-319; PD 3083-320; PD 3083-321; PD 3083-322 (DA 10013)","" "Deposit","FixChildren","28 April-5 May 1937; 7 April-6 May 1938, 20 April to 15 June 1938,; 5 May-22 June 1939","","Agora","","Well C - Passage, belongs with II - Brick Shaft. All dumped fills. No objects catalogued from Well C of section ΟΑ. One object (I 5422) catalogued from modern fill in shaft, one from dump (I 5545).","","","","Agora:Deposit:U 22:1","2nd c. A.D.- Byzantine","U 22:1","" "Deposit","FixChildren","","","Agora","","Lower fill in shaft; upper and lower drain filling; shaft, in upper chambers.","","","Fill C.","Agora:Deposit:U 22:1.3","Late 2nd-earliest 3rd c. A.D.","U 22:1.3","" "Image","","","","Agora","","AMS","Agora:Image:2012.79.0060::/Agora/2012/2012.79/2012.79.0060.jpg::2048::1402","","Situla with Plastic Attachments","Agora:Image:2012.79.0060","","2012.79.0060 (93-3-5a)","" "Image","","","","Agora","","AMS","Agora:Image:2012.79.0061::/Agora/2012/2012.79/2012.79.0061.jpg::2048::1387","","Situla with Plastic Attachments","Agora:Image:2012.79.0061","","2012.79.0061 (93-3-6a)","" "Publication","","2008","Hayes, J.","Agora","","Examples of Roman period red-gloss and red-slip pottery generally termed terra sigillata found during excavations in the Athenian Agora form the focus of this volume. These fine wares, like the other table wares of the first seven centuries A.D. discussed here, were all imported—a very different situation to earlier periods where Athens was known as a great ceramic-making center, and perhaps the result of mass destruction of potters’ workshops during the Sullan sack of 86 B.C. While the image of a demolished pottery industry is tragic, the consequent conglomeration of finewares from many parts of the Roman empire in one city makes the Athenian Agora a tremendous source of comparanda for archaeologists working all round the Mediterranean. Written by the world’s leading expert on Roman pottery, this huge catalogue illustrating and identifying multiple shapes and types of decoration will therefore be an essential reference book.","Agora:Image:2009.09.0062::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0062.jpg::104::150","","Roman Pottery: Fine-Ware Imports","Agora:Publication:Agora 32","","Agora XXXII","The American School of Classical Studies at Athens"