"dc-creator","Icon","Type","Chronology","Collection","dc-description","dc-title","dc-subject","dc-date","Redirect","UserLevel","Id","Name","dc-publisher" "","Agora:Card:P-15916-1::/Agora/Cards/P 15xxx/P-15916-1.jpg::2048::1402","Card","","Agora","","","","","","","Agora:Card:P-15916-1","P 15916","" "","","Deposit","Ca. 520-480 B.C.","Agora","A well on the NW slope of the Areopagus; unfinished well-shaft dug to a depth of only 3.05m., and refilled with broken pottery and other debris. The shaft clearly was begun with the intention of digging a well, since footholds were cut in the sides; the reason for the abandonment was not clear; the rock appeared quite suitable for well-sinking. The filling, 490-480 B.C. and earlier, might however suggest that external circumstances interrupted the project; the neighboring shaft, F 19:4, would then represent a slightly later attempt to provide water supply in this vicinity.; ; ""The two fills (Fill I to 1.75m.; and Fill II, 1.75-3.05m.) appear to be contemporary"" (deposit nb.). No subdivisions given.","Unfinished Well Shaft","","3-4 May 1939","","","Agora:Deposit:F 19:5","F 19:5","" "","","Object","Context ca. 520-480 B.C.","Agora","Flat floor, thickened rim. Handbuilt of household ware with straw tempering; black glaze inside. Graffito on rim: ΜΙ.; ; Also from a late archaic context, P 20816 R 12:1; and, from a context of the second quarter of the 5th century, P 5191 H 6:5 Hesperia, V, 1936, p. 345, fig. 13; noted by Ginouvès, Balaneutikè, p. 33.","","Black and Plain Pottery | Tub","","","","Agora:Object:Agora XII:1846","Agora XII, no. 1846","" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-12.2-37::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 012.2/Agora 012.2 037 (410).png::1449::2048","PublicationPage","","Agora","Agora 12","Cistern","","","","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-12.2-37","Agora 12.2, s. 37, p. 410","" "Sparkes, B. A.","Agora:Image:2009.09.0042::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0042.jpg::200::263","Publication","","Agora","This massive (two-part) volume focuses on pottery produced between 600 and 300 B.C. with Sparkes discussing the black glaze and Talcott the domestic (household and kitchen) wares of the period. Over 2,040 pieces of black-glaze pottery are catalogued and described, with many drawings and photographs.","Black and Plain Pottery of the 6th, 5th and 4th Centuries B.C.","","1970","","","Agora:Publication:Agora 12","Agora XII","American School of Classical Studies at Athens"