[Agora Object] A 917: Roof Tile Fragment: Stamped

Fragment of rain tile; broken all around. Coarse clay, buff inside, yellow on surface. Mother of the Gods series; the stamp is faint. South of Building C; disturbed earth round late Roman terracotta ... 14 May 1938

[Agora Object] A 918: Roof Tile Fragment: Stamped

Broken all around. Fragment from a large probably concave rain tile covered on top with thin brown glaze. Deeply stamped in its upper surface. Middle Drain to north of Building C, loose gravely filling ... 25 May 1938

[Agora Object] A 921: Roof Tile: Stamped

Fragment from upper right corner of a large flat rain tile with high, curved lateral flange and a low half-round flange across the top. Buff clay tempered with coarse brown and white grit, yellow on surface ... 23 May 1938

icon

[Agora Object] A 933: Capital Fragment: Ionic

A small fragment from a volute, preserving part of the resting surface. The face of the volute is plain, finished with a tooth chisel. Pentelic marble. Finished Tholos Trench F, Kitchen Dump. 1863 Leica, ... 7 June 1937

icon

[Agora Object] A 991: Capital Fragment: Ionic: Painted

Preserved are part of face, outer edge and back of volute. Decoration on face was painted. Pattern remains, but no color. At center a rosette; halfway between this and edge, a narrow reserved line. Cf ... 1934 or 1935

icon

[Agora Object] A 1038: Water Pipe

Broken, but nearly complete. One long and one short joint tongue; rectangular clean-out hole. Pale yellow clay with coarse grit; thin brown glaze on inside only. Finished From the drain of the kitchen ... 550-525 B.C.

icon

[Agora Object] A 1039: Water Pipe

Broken but practically complete. One long joint tongue only. Oval clean-out hole. Buff clay, unglazed inside, four brown rings outside. Cf. Hesperia Suppl. 4 (1940), pp. 88, 90, n. 66, fig. 67. Finished ... 470 B.C.

icon

[Agora Object] A 1040: Water Pipeline

Broken, but complete. One long and one short joint tongue. Oval clean-out hole. Buff clay; thin glaze on inside only. Finished From a drain to the S.E. of the Bouleuterion Propylon, perhaps with earliest ... 470 B.C.