"dc-publisher","Id","dc-creator","Collection","Name","dc-date","UserLevel","Type","dc-title","Chronology","Icon","dc-description","dc-subject","Redirect" "","Agora:Deposit:K 20:1","","Agora","K 20:1","24 April-13 May 1940","","Deposit","Late Roman Hole","3rd-4th c. A.D.","","Upper fill (top to around 4.50m.) was in a pit of large dimensions above the preserved well shaft. From the bottom and shaft proper no catalogued pottery. No tiling in place in well but fragments of tiles in fill.","","" "","Agora:Deposit:O 20:1","","Agora","O 20:1","13-25 May 1938","","Deposit","Cistern at 63/ΛΑ","300-195 B.C.","","Cistern at 63/ΛΑ (part of cistern system 63/ΛΑ-65/ΜΑ-70/ΛΣΤ, consisting of two chambers and a well). Roman upper fill with modern cesspool fill above. Channel finds: MC 517, SS 8078.; ; Only datable object a Rhodian stamped amphora handle (ca. 211).","","" "","Agora:Deposit:D 4:1","","Agora","D 4:1","1-16 April 1937","","Deposit","West Chamber","Use filling early 1st-2nd c. B.C.","","Cistern-chamber on the northwest side of Kolonos Agoraios, 10 to 12m west of the end of the Hellenistic Building. Dimensions at bottom 2.50m x 2.75m.; The west chamber of a cistern system composed of two chambers connected by a passage (91/Ν); the east chamber at 91/Ν (E 5:1) retained little or no traces of its original period of use. North of the Hephaisteion. (Roman Group G).","","" "American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Agora:Publication:Agora 7","Perlzweig, J.","Agora","Agora VII","1961","","Publication","Lamps of the Roman Period: First to Seventh Century after Christ","","Agora:Image:2009.09.0038::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0038.jpg::104::150","Nearly 3,000 specimens of lamps of “Roman” character are catalogued in this volume that covers the period from the 1st century B.C. to the 8th century A.D. The lamps are not easy to classify because the appearance of the clay used is not an infallible guide to the place of manufacture and the molds used to create the shapes were used widely around the Mediterranean. Terracotta lamps were probably made for local consumption in most cities of Greece; only a few centers, notably Athens and Corinth, developed an export trade capable of competing with local manufacturers. Since lamps from Athens do appear at other sites, the presentation of a well-dated sample of these finds provides useful reference material for scholars working at other sites.","",""