"dc-subject","Icon","Chronology","Name","dc-creator","dc-date","dc-description","Id","UserLevel","Redirect","dc-title","Collection","dc-publisher","Type" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-56::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 056 (46).png::1438::2048","343-348 A.D.; 348-350 A.D.; 337-340 A.D.; 333-337 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 337-350 A.D.; 340-348 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 56, p. 46","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-56","","","Constans I","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-52::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 052 (42).png::1438::2048","337-340 A.D.; 324-326 A.D.; 333-337 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 324-330 A.D.; 330-337 A.D.; 317-318 A.D.; 337-361 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 52, p. 42","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-52","","","Constantine II","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-54::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 054 (44).png::1438::2048","326-330 A.D.; 330-337 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 337-340 A.D.; 337-361 A.D.; 340-348 A.D.; 343-348 A.D.; 348-353 A.D.; 348-361 A.D.; 324-326 A.D.; 333-337 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 54, p. 44","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-54","","","Constantius II","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-48::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 048 (38).png::1438::2048","337 A.D.; 315-317 A.D.; 317-324 A.D.; 324-326 A.D.; 333-337 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 307 A.D.; 313-317 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 48, p. 38","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-48","","","Constantine I","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-47::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 047 (37).png::1438::2048","324-326 A.D.; 333-337 A.D.; 337 A.D.; 312-313 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 324-330 A.D.; 326-330 A.D.; 330-337 A.D.; 315-318 A.D.; 317-324 A.D.; 307 A.D.; 313-314 A.D.; 313-317 A.D.; 317-318 A.D.; 320-324 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 47, p. 37","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-47","","","Constantine I","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-46::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 046 (36).png::1438::2048","307-337 A.D.; 312-313 A.D.; 312-317 A.D.; 320-324 A.D.; 333-335 A.D.; 313-317 A.D.; 317-320 A.D.; 317-324 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 324-326 A.D.; 330-337 A.D.; 337 A.D.; 313-320 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 46, p. 36","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-46","","","Constantine I","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-51::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 051 (41).png::1438::2048","320-324 A.D.; 317-320 A.D.; 324-326 A.D.; 337-340 A.D.; 330-333 A.D.; 330-337 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 333-337 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 51, p. 41","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-51","","","Crispus","Agora","","PublicationPage" ".1 Top to -11m (containers 1-8), dump 7th c. ?","","3rd c. A.D. POU (before 267 A.D.)","N 20:3","","16 March 1938; 21 March-4 April 1938","Well dug through cistern at 64/Γ. Seems to have been stratified; four fills recorded but here treated as one as divisions are rather ""arbitrary"".; Agora V, p. 126: Constructed in late 1st c.; use filling of 3rd c (before 267); use(?) filling of 4th c; dumped filling of 6th or 7th c.; The floor of the cistern is at -2.90m. When the well was built, the lower part of the cistern chamber behind the well tiles was filled with large wine amphoras, of which 18 whole ones were found.; A human skeleton identified as female by Angel, was found at a depth of -13.50m, at the point where the pottery changes from the late third or fourth century to the early third. The skeleton may have been thrown in when the Heruli sacked the city.","Agora:Deposit:N 20:3","","","Well","Agora","","Deposit" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-57::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 057 (47).png::1438::2048","335-337 A.D.; 350 A.D.; 350-353 A.D.; 351-354 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 57, p. 47","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-57","","","Constans I","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-55::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 055 (45).png::1438::2048","337-340 A.D.; 337-361 A.D.; 343-348 A.D.; 348-353 A.D.; 348-361 A.D.; 335-337 A.D.; 337-350 A.D.; 340-348 A.D.; 333-337 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 55, p. 45","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-55","","","Constantius II","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","","Late 2nd-early 6th c. A.D.","G 11:2","","18 May-10 June 1937","May be of Hellenistic origin when cistern system went out of use. ; For a general note on the cistern see Nb. ΟΕ III, pp. 246 ff.; ; Objects from B 586 various depths (no subdivision): S 2324-S 2330, ; P 34894, P 34898.; Objects from the Dump (no subdivision): P 10775, P 34895.; Containers representing various depths (no subdivision): Β 586, 587.","Agora:Deposit:G 11:2","","","Well in Cistern to West of Tholos","Agora","","Deposit" "","","Prehistoric to Roman","E-F 2-3:2","","7 March-1 April 1939","N-S Cut on 50m. line (area of Road, area of Stoa, area N of Stoa) various levels and dates over the three areas. ; Investigations to the northwest of the market square in the area of the road running out of the square and of the stoa that bordered it to the north; explanatory cut at the west boundary of the excavated area.; No subdivisions are given but the layers are dated over the three areas as follows:; Area of Road:; Layer I: 2nd-3rd c. A.D.; Layer II: 1st-2nd c. A.D.; Layer III-IV: 1st c. A.D.; Layer V-VI: 1st c. B.C.-1st c. A.D.; Layer VII-VIII: 3rd-early 4th c. B.C.; Area of Stoa:; Layer I: 2nd-3rd c. A.D.; Layer II: 1st c. A.D. (?); Layer III: 1st c. B.C.; Layer IV: 4th-3rd c. B.C.; Layer V-VIII: 4th c. B.C.; Layer IX: late 5th-first half 4th c. B.C.; Layer X: 6th-5th c. B.C., Geometric; Layer XI-XVIII: prehistoric to Neolithic (?); Area North of Stoa:; Layer I: early Roman; Layer II: late 3rd-early 4th c. A.D.; Layer III-VI: 4th c. B.C.; Layer VII: early 5th c. B.C.; Layer VIII: 5th c. B.C., Geometric, Helladic; Layer IX: Late-Middle Helladic; ; See also cut on 20m. line (F-G 3:1).","Agora:Deposit:E-F 2-3:2","","","Fill","Agora","","Deposit" "Pottery","Corinth:Image:bw 2006 001 07::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/2006_001/2006_st_001_007.jpg::1800::1207","","C 1940 50","","","","Corinth:Object:C 1940 50","","","UNGLAZED MORTAR","Corinth","","Object" "","Agora:Image:1997.20.0439::/Agora/1997/1997.20/1997.20.0439.tif::655::960","Developed Protogeometric","C 11:4","James H. Oliver","28-30 May 1935","(E.L. Smithson: Grave IX: PG). Two children's skeletons one on top of the other. Cf. PD 329 for PD 430 for second skeleton, same deposit.; PG grave about 25m. SW of Cistern A at 46/ΜΔ. ; [In some records, erroneously as ΠΘ Grave 5 (an empty pit cleared in 1936), cf. nb. p. 321.] ; JP; ; Rectangular put cut through yellow earth into bedrock to a depth of 0.30m below the level of the uncut surrounding bedrock. Oriented southeast-northwest, the tomb measured 1.40m long and 0.65m wide at the top, narrowing with depth. The bedrock forming the edges of the tomb pit was stepped in to provide an irregular ledge, running round all four sizes. maximum width of the pit at the bottom was about 0.30m. a partial lining of fieldstones was bedded on the ledges; the uppermost stones were interrupted at the southeast corner by an irregular recessed pocket containing two lekythoi.; Skeletons fully extended, heads to the southeast. Lower skeleton was described as a ""six-year-old girl"" with arms bent over the body. The upper skeleton with arms extended at the sides was considered as perhaps also a girl, about 7 years old. In the process of restudying the human remains, the lower skeleton could not be located, and it may not have been saved.; All of the grave goods were found either around or above the upper skeleton. A quantity of water-worn pebbles, were also recovered from around the upper skeleton. Also, ""black carbonized matter"" and "" small thin animal bones"" were noted. The latter were thought to be from a sacrificial animal or animals, but the bones were not analyzed,nor were they saved.; The two bodies were probably inhumed at the same time. this is supported by the fact that the skeletons, both well preserved, were neatly laid out on top of each other with no earth separating them.","Agora:Deposit:C 11:4","","","Pit tomb, inhumation of two children","Agora","","Deposit" "Pottery","Corinth:Image:bw 1999 024 03::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1999_024/1999_st_024_003.jpg::1800::1179","","C 1960 50b","","1960/04/27","See C-1960-050A.","Corinth:Object:C 1960 50b","","","BYZANTINE DUOCHROME SGRAFFITO BOWL: FRAGMENT","Corinth","","Object" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-173::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 029.1/Agora 029.1 173 (134).png::1519::2048","","Agora 29.1, s. 173, p. 134","","","Agora 29","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-173","","","Cistern","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","","2nd-4th c. A.D.","C 13:2","","1 April-28 May 1936","Roman well, stratified.; Finds from the earth (not recorded in a subdivision):; P 7995, P 8036, P 21834, SS 6338, IL 483, IL 486, BI 309, BI 310, ; BI 314.; ; According to the excavator the shaft had been cleaned out at some period and then used as a vothros over a long time (p. 1874). Despite the general paucity of the well fill (only 21 tins of pottery from -7.00m to bottom), a rather large number of amphorae, micaceous water jars and other handled containers were represented among the sherds and some stratification is apparent. The well might for some reason have been used only sparingly or it might have been equipped with a metal bucket which was used in preference to clay jars on most occasions.","Agora:Deposit:C 13:2","","","Well","Agora","","Deposit" ".1 Top to -2.50m. Byzantine-discarded.","","POU 2nd c. A.D.","E 17:1","","16-24 April 1948","Use filling of early to late 2nd c. A.D., and dumped filling of late 2nd c.","Agora:Deposit:E 17:1","","","Well","Agora","","Deposit" "","","Ca. 350 B.C.","H 4:2","","10-11 May 1972","A tile-lined well at H/16-4/14,15 under the Roman Propylon. The tiles had been cut down; highest completely preserved tile at 50.696 m. Only three rings of tiling were preserved , the uppermost almost completely missing. The lowest part of the well was unlined and cut through bedrock. It widened out to east and west below the tile lining. H. of tiles 0.642. There were letters at the edges of the segments of the tiles. Each ring was in three segments. In situ are preserved tiles with the letters ΟΟ, ΔΕ, and ΣΛ. Other symbols on tiles found in the well are ΚΡ, ΔΙ, a lotus and a pomegranate. Letters written to be read from inside.","Agora:Deposit:H 4:2","","","Well under Roman Propylon.","Agora","","Deposit" "","","2nd/3rd quarters of 5th c.-420s","I 4:2","","18 June-30 August 1993","Fill against back wall foundations of Royal Stoa I/6,9-4/8,14. Dug separately, these many fills contain material which joined horizontally and vertically all along back wall of Royal Stoa. Fill seems to date as late as the 420s.during mending.","Agora:Deposit:I 4:2","","","Building Fill in ΒΓ","Agora","","Deposit" "Pottery","Corinth:Image:bw 1962 006 12::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1962_006/1962_st_006_012.jpg::1800::1185","1090-1120 (G. Sanders) Context: coin of Wm. Villehardouin (1245-50)","C 1960 50a","","1960/04/27","Bowl with flaring ring foot, lower half of which trimmed back at angle, uneven resting surface, slightly rounded undersurface. Deep echinoid body, groove offseting narrow vertical rim with projecting lip on interior, offset by groove from top of rim. Bowl warped ?","Corinth:Object:C 1960 50a","","","BYZANTINE DUOCHROME SGRAFFITO BOWL: FRAGMENT","Corinth","","Object" "Pottery","Corinth:Image:bw 1981 068 35::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/1981_068/1981_st_068_035.jpg::1800::1222","","C 1926 50","","1926/06/01;1926/06/04","Mould made bowl with slightly recessed resting surface, low convex wall and straight rim zone.","Corinth:Object:C 1926 50","","","MOLDED RELIEF BOWL","Corinth","","Object" "","","Late 1st. c.-4th. c. A.D. (and 5th c. A.D.?)","B 13:2","","29 May-13 June 1936; 5-25 May 1937","Well with overflow into cistern system. Probably Hellenistic in origin. POU late 1st. c. to early 3rd. c. Dumped filling of 4th. (and 5th.?) c. ; Abandoned at 22.50m. because of water.","Agora:Deposit:B 13:2","","","Well","Agora","","Deposit" "","","1st.-4th c. A.D.","B 14:2","","12 June 1936; 23 April 1937","Well on south slope of Kolonos Agoraios. Use filling of late 1st. to late 2nd. c. A.D.; dumped filling of 4th. c. A.D.","Agora:Deposit:B 14:2","","","Well on South Slope of Kolonos Agoraios","Agora","","Deposit" "From top of well to a level of c. 49.76 masl : gray clay with many small boulders and considerable quantities of pottery.","Agora:Image:2007.01.2111::/Agora/2007/2007.01/2007.01.2111.tif::2968::2732","","J 2:4","","22 July-9 August 1994; 26 June 1995; 3-7 July 1995","Initially uncovered with a diameter of c. 1.05m. Its south side extends under the south wall of the Classical structure and so clearly predates it. The highest preserved portion of the well shaft (at the east) lies at an elevation of 51.03m above sea level. There is no well head, but a small portion of light clay bordering the preserved top of the shaft on the east side might indicate the contemporary ground level. The well is cut through a compact stratum of fill at the top of its the north side; elsewhere it is cut into the gray bedrock. On the south side of the shaft, a lining wall of field stones is preserved from an elevation of 49.44m above sea level; around the rest of the shaft it is preserved from an elevation of 48.99m. It is not clear at exactly what elevation the lining wall originally began, but it seems unlikely that the entire shaft was lined, for the cutting in bedrock for the upper part of the shaft, where it is well preserved on the east side, lies directly above the inner face of the lining wall below. If lined, the upper part of the shaft would have been quite constricted (c. 0.70m.).; We removed only a small portion of the lowest fill when we were compelled to abandon excavation. Because the south side of the well shaft projects beneath the E-W Classical Wall at J/6,7-2/20, we attempted to leave undug the portion of the well fill that underlies that wall. Towards the end of season, the lower portion of that undug fill began to collapse into the shaft. A probe into the fill with an iron crowbar indicates that the fill in the shaft continues for at least another meter and a half.","Agora:Deposit:J 2:4","","","Archaic Well","Agora","","Deposit" "","","Earth 5th c. B.C.","U 19:2","","13-31 July 1959","Well Y, in area North of the West end of the Yellow Poros Foundation. The shaft had cut through the wall of an earlier well and the cavity had been packed with stones by the diggers of the new well. In shaft, debris filling of clay and field stones. Over top of well, a second dumped filling.","Agora:Deposit:U 19:2","","","Well Y North of the West End of the Yellow Poros Foundation","Agora","","Deposit" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-30-224::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 030/Agora 030 224 (205).png::1438::2048","Late 5th-early 4th B.C.; Late 5th B.C.","Agora 30, s. 224, p. 205","","","Agora 30","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-30-224","","","Well","Agora","","PublicationPage" "Corinthia | Ancient Corinth | Central Area | Glauke West","","Post 1830 revolution","Glauke West, context 4","","2008/11/05","Deposit","Corinth:Basket:Glauke West, context 4","","","South Trench, general fill","Corinth","","Basket" "Pottery","Corinth:Image:bw 2002 047 04::/Corinth/Photos/negatives/year_roll/2002_047/2002_st_047_004.jpg::1203::1800","EC?","C 2002 50","","2002/07/30","Small aryballos, probably pointed with rounded upper body, flattened low sloping shoulder, narrow cylindrical neck, broad horizontal outturned neck. Vertical handle attached to underside of rim.","Corinth:Object:C 2002 50","","","FIGURED POINTED ARYBALLOS","Corinth","","Object" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-59::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 002/Agora 002 059 (49).png::1438::2048","355-360 A.D.; 361-363 A.D.","Agora 2, s. 59, p. 49","","","Agora 2","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-2-59","","","Julian II","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-13-191::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 013/Agora 013 191 (170).png::1449::2048","Mycenaean III A","Agora 13, s. 191, p. 170","","","Agora 13","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-13-191","","","Stirrup Vase","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","","Early Roman-3rd c. B.C.","N 21:4","","5-17 May 1939","Cistern with two tunnels, the one entering its neck cut off by an early Roman well, the other, at the bottom not excavated. ; Chamber conical in shape, with a depressed draw basin in the center of the floor. No stratigraphy noted during excavation, but analysis of pottery suggests three fills, of which the lower two are potter's dumps. ; Subdivisions are based on containers at time of excavation.; ; Middle fill: Only stamped amphora handle comes from Late Corinthian jar of second half of 3rd c. Latest coins date 200-180. Two molds, stamp for manufacture of molds, and clay stacking ring suggest fill is dump from potter's establishment. all molds and fragments of bowls produced by Workshop of Bion. Cistern M 21:1, 20 meters to southwest, also contained molds and large quantity of bowls, mostly products of Workshop of Bion. N 21:4 and m 21:1 are probably contemporary dumps from this shop, which was located near by.; ; Lower fill: 13 stamped amphora handles. Latest coin dates in first third of 3rd c. Fragments of two bowls; one stacking ring (possibly from middle fill).","Agora:Deposit:N 21:4","","","Satyr Cistern","Agora","","Deposit" "","Agora:Image:2007.11.1127::/Agora/2007/2007.11/2007.11.1127.tif::3066::2901","Ca. 490-450 B.C.","F 19:4","","2-19 May 1939","This filling is the largest deposit of its time found in the Agora. It may be compared with H 6:5 and with N 7:3. ; Dug in soft bedrock to a depth of 11.40m; footholds cut on opposite sides of the shaft reached only to 5m. The lowest filling, from 10.75m to bottom, consisting of bedrock fallen from the sides of the well, contained little or no pottery. The main filling was apparently a single deposit, but the amount of pottery found varied appreciably at different depths, the heaviest concentration being a little over half way down, from 6.40m to 7m.; An ample supply of water, encountered (in may) at a depth of 5.30m, along with the relatively sound condition of the rock walls, suggested that the well could have been used.","Agora:Deposit:F 19:4","","","Well","Agora","","Deposit" "","","Use filling early 1st-2nd c. B.C.","D 4:1","","1-16 April 1937","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).","Agora:Deposit:D 4:1","","","West Chamber","Agora","","Deposit" "FixChildren","Agora:Image:2004.04.0034::/Agora/2004/2004.04/2004.04.0034.tif::1571::1549","Late 4th/early 5th AD","T 22:3","","14 June-31 July 31 2002, 25 June-3 July, 2003","Well cut into bedrock, associated with late Roman building G in ΕΛ 1.2m in diameter, narrows to 0.5m at bottom. Disturbed by later pits at top. Excavated from 85.77-79.25m (6.52m), but bedrock at 85.91m may have been the original elevation of the mouth. Upper portion originally lined; collapsed lining found in Layer V. Six layers of dumped fills and one period of use fill. Water table at ca. 82.55m.; Layers:; I. (85.77-84.94m) mixed rocky fill.; II. (84.94-83.92m) dark fill with tiles.; III. (83.92-83.75m) dark compact fill, less tiles.; IV. (83.75-83.07m) rocky, sandy fill (excavated in two baskets, seasons 2002-2003).; V. (83.07-82.55m) browner sandy fill with tiles.; VI. (82.55-80.75m) water table, grayer fill.; POU; VII. (80.75-79.25m) dark fill, whole jugs and water jars.","Agora:Deposit:T 22:3","","","Well","Agora","","Deposit" ".1 Top to ca. 1.00 5th-6th century dump.","","1st.-2nd. c. A.D.","B 21:1","","8 May 1939; 2-10 June 1939","Cistern in valley west of the Areopagus. Dumped filling of late 1st. to early 2nd. c. and of 5th to 6th century.","Agora:Deposit:B 21:1","","","Cistern","Agora","","Deposit" "","","Ca. 350-294 B.C.","F 11:2","","5 April-8 May 1934","Well associated with the Tholos, with scanty use fill but primarily dumped filling.","Agora:Deposit:F 11:2","","","Well","Agora","","Deposit" "","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-168::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 029.1/Agora 029.1 168 (129).png::1519::2048","","Agora 29.1, s. 168, p. 129","","","Agora 29","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-168","","","Biconical Jug","Agora","","PublicationPage" "","","1st-5th c. A.D., 2nd c. A.D.=POU","F 16:2","","26 April-5 May 1932","Nbp. 661: Dug in 1st c. Cleaned out almost to bottom shortly after the middle of the 3rd c. and used for a few years. During Herulian invasion of 267, Laughing Faun broken up and thrown in. Thereafter used at intervals until 5th c. when finally filled to the top.","Agora:Deposit:F 16:2","","","Well of the Laughing Faun","Agora","","Deposit" "","","730-700 B.C.","L 18:2","","15-25 May 1937","Well on lower slopes of Areopagus. ; Diameter ca. 1.50m. Dumped filling of 8th c. at the top. Fill mostly Geometric but containing bits of later (even Roman) pottery. Perhaps cleaned out and refilled with its own contents at the time of building of Roman house over it.","Agora:Deposit:L 18:2","","","Well on Lower Slopes of Areopagus","Agora","","Deposit"