"dc-creator","UserLevel","Id","Type","Collection","Icon","dc-subject","dc-description","dc-publisher","dc-title","dc-date","Name","Redirect","Chronology" "","","Agora:Card:I-6390-1","Card","Agora","Agora:Card:I-6390-1::/Agora/Cards/I 6xxx/I-06390-1.jpg::2048::1402","","","","","","I 6390","","" "","","Agora:Drawing:DA 5780","Drawing","Agora","Agora:Drawing:DA 5780::/Agora/Architecture/DAs/05000-05999/DA 5780.jpg::0::0","","Dirty","","Inscription.","","PD 2177 (DA 5780)","","" "Geagan, D. J.","","Agora:Publication:Hesperia Supplement 12","Publication","Agora","Agora:Image:2009.09.0072::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0072.jpg::641::835","","This book aims to examine the text of every known Athenian inscription datable to the period after the new constitution of Sulla (ca. 68 B.C.) and to reconstruct information about the civic offices and institutions established in this period. The author therefore presents all the evidence he has found for the duties of major officials, councillors, and minor magistrates. He compares this information with the earlier picture painted by Aristotle in his study of the Constitution of the Athenians, and shows that many changes took place in the Roman period.","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","The Athenian Constitution after Sulla","1967","Hesperia Suppl. 12 (1967)","","" "Geagan, D.","","Agora:Publication:Agora 18","Publication","Agora","Agora:Image:2009.09.0049::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0049.jpg::376::500","","This is the last of five volumes presenting inscriptions discovered in the Athenian Agora between 1931 and 1967. Published here are inscriptions on monuments commemorating events or victories, on statues or other representations erected to honor individuals and deities, and on votive offerings to divinities. Most are dated to between the 4th century B.C. and the 2nd century A.D., but a few survive from the Archaic and Late Roman periods. A final section contains monuments that are potentially, but not certainly, dedicatory in character, and a small number of grave markers omitted from Agora XVII. Each of the 773 catalogue entries includes a description of the object inscribed, bibliography, a transcription of the Greek text, and commentary. There are photographs of each piece of which no adequate illustration has yet been published, including newly joined fragments. The volume concludes with concordances, bibliography, and an index of persons named in the inscriptions.","The American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Inscriptions: The Dedicatory Monuments","2009","Agora XVIII","",""