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[Agora Publication] The Neolithic and Bronze Ages

Immerwahr, S. A ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... The finds in the Athenian Agora from the Neolithic and Bronze Ages have added important chronological context to the earliest eras of Athenian history. The bulk of the items are pottery, but stone, bone, ... 1971

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[Agora Object] P 4646: Three-Handled Jar

About one-half of vase preserved. Broken, especially at foot, in many fragments. Profile complete and two handles preserved. Restored in plaster. From the high shoulder, the body tapers with a concave ... 14 February 1935

[Agora Object] P 4647: Vessel Fragment

Fragment from wall of a large vase of fairly thin fabric. Mended from many pieces. A small fragment from the neck does not join. Vase seems to have had wide flat shoulder, and tapered more gradually toward ... 14 February 1935

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[Agora Object] P 22313: Kylix

Mended from many pieces; a few fragments from rim and walls missing and one fragment from the handle. A cup with deep bowl, long slender stem and spreading foot, concave beneath. Two high swung band handles; ... 27 May 1952

[Agora Object] P 22314: Feeder

Mended from many pieces; complete save small piece of rim and chips. Squat globular shape; low ring foot; high basket handle. Decoration in thin brownish-black glaze: the spout glazed, the top of the handle, ... 27 May 1952

[Agora Object] P 22315: Jug

Chip missing from lip; otherwise intact. Globular body on very low ring foot; band handle from rim; plain lip slightly out-turned. Pinkish-buff clay with occasional large bits; glazed over all, except ... 27 May 1952

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[Agora Deposit] M 12:1: Cist Grave in

Mycenaean Grave. One of the first Mycenaean burials found in the Agora. It consisted of a regular cist, carefully cut with vertical sides and a flat bottom, measuring 1.90m by 0.55m. There were apparently ... LH III (c. 1200)

[Agora Deposit] M 12:2: Mycenaean (?) Grave

Grave of 38 year-old female, head NW, legs drawn up. Apparently unlined cist in bedrock or hard-packed dug-bedrock, its outlines no longer distinguishable from surrounding fill. Above skeleton, a number ... Mycenaean?