"Icon","dc-publisher","Chronology","dc-description","dc-creator","Name","dc-date","Type","Collection","Redirect","Id","UserLevel","dc-subject","dc-title" "Agora:Card:P-26819-1::/Agora/Cards/P 26xxx/P-26819-1.jpg::2048::1401","","","","","P 26819","","Card","Agora","","Agora:Card:P-26819-1","","","" "","","550-500 B.C.","Continuous filling over its mouth and in it to a depth of -7.30m. Clearly the fill thrown in at the time of Archaic Building, to raise the ground level. The last few centimeters of the well represented its brief period of use. ; Below the throw-in filling, and directly over the pottery of the period of use lay half a dozen chips of yellow Kara stone, some with worked surfaces. These are surely to be connected with the construction of the building, with thus must be set sometime within the last quarter of the 6th c. B.C.","","T 19:1","26 May-5 June 1936","Deposit","Agora","","Agora:Deposit:T 19:1","","","Well at 51/ΛΖ" "Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-23-311::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 023/Agora 023 311 (295).png::1495::2048","","500-490 B.C.; 500 B.C.","Agora 23","","Agora 23, s. 311, p. 295","","PublicationPage","Agora","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-23-311","","","Bothmer, Amazons, p. 82, no. 120" "Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-31-144::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 031/Agora 031 144 (121).png::1481::2048","","","Agora 31","","Agora 31, s. 144, p. 121","","PublicationPage","Agora","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-31-144","","","Fill" "Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-23-370::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 023/Agora 023 370 (354).png::1495::2048","","","Agora 23","","Agora 23, s. 370, p. 354","","PublicationPage","Agora","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-23-370","","","Other" "Agora:Image:2009.09.0053::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0053.jpg::370::500","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","","This volume is the first of the Athenian Agora reports to deal specifically with figured wares; it is concerned with the black-figured pottery found in the excavations in the Athenian Agora between 1931 and 1967, most of it in dumped fill especially in wells and cisterns. These deposits have been published separately in previous reports; by presenting them as a body, the authors are able to show how it complements and supplements the existing chronological and stylistic framework of shapes and artists. All the important pieces are shown in photographs, as well as all complete vases and those with particular problems. Profile drawings and reconstructions of the composition are supplied in a few special cases. Summary descriptions of references and a site plan are given for the deposits, which are also identified in the concordance of catalogue and inventory numbers. There are indexes of potters, painters, groups, and classes; subjects; shape and ornament; collections and provenances; and a general index.","Moore, M. B.","Agora XXIII","1986","Publication","Agora","","Agora:Publication:Agora 23","","","Attic Black-Figured Pottery" "Agora:Image:2009.09.0061::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0061.jpg::372::500","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","","An archaeological study of the City Eleusinion in Athens, the sanctuary of Eleusinian Demeter and the city terminus for the annual Eleusinian Mysteries. The book presents the stratigraphical evidence from excavations of a part of the sanctuary (conducted in the 1930s and 1959-1960), the remains of the Temple of Triptolemos, a Hellenistic stoa, and a propylon, and contains extensive descriptions of the context pottery, a discussion of the ritual vessel plemochoe, and catalogues of inscriptions, sculpture, and architectural pieces from the sanctuary. There is a survey of the topography of the sanctuary and its environs on the North Slope of the Acropolis, and a discussion of its relationship to Eleusis and its position as a landmark within the city of Athens. Since a significant portion of the sanctuary still lies unexcavated under the modern city, the book includes a detailed assessment of the only evidence known so far for the various phases of use of the sanctuary, from the earliest evidence of the 7th century B.C. to the late antique period.","Miles, M.","Agora XXXI","1998","Publication","Agora","","Agora:Publication:Agora 31","","","The City Eleusinion"