"dc-title","Redirect","UserLevel","Id","Type","dc-publisher","Collection","Name","Chronology","Icon","dc-subject","dc-description","dc-creator","dc-date" "Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","","","Agora:Publication:Hesperia 5","Publication","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Agora","Hesperia 5 (1936)","","","","Hesperia","","1936" "Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","","","Agora:Publication:Hesperia 14","Publication","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Agora","Hesperia 14 (1945)","","","","Hesperia","","1945" "Studies in Athenian Architecture, Sculpture, and Topography Presented to Homer A. Thompson","","","Agora:Publication:Hesperia Supplement 20","Publication","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Agora","Hesperia Suppl. 20 (1982)","","Agora:Image:2009.09.0077::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0077.jpg::566::770","","Twenty-one papers on various aspects of Athenian art and society by the students and friends of Homer A. Thompson, a noted classical archaeologist and excavator of the Athenian Agora. The volume includes many papers on sculpture (including Nancy Bookidis on Attic terracotta sculpture and Brunhilde Ridgway on the features of kouroi and korai in Archaic Athens), some on architecture (including William B. Dinsmoor Jr. on the Pinakotheke), and a few on topography (including Sara Immerwahr on “the earliest known grave in Athens” and Evelyn Smithson on evidence for a prehistoric Klepsydra).","","1982" "The Neolithic and Bronze Ages","","","Agora:Publication:Agora 13","Publication","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","Agora","Agora XIII","","Agora:Image:2009.09.0043::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0043.jpg::379::500","","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, and metal objects also occur. Selected material from the Neolithic and from the Early and Middle Helladic periods is catalogued by fabric and then shape and forms the basis of detailed discussions of the wares (by technique, shapes, and decoration), the stone and bone objects, and their relative and absolute chronology. The major part of the volume is devoted to the Mycenaean period, the bulk of it to the cemetery of forty-odd tombs and graves with detailed discussions of architectural forms; of funeral rites; of offerings of pottery, bronze, ivory, and jewelry; and of chronology. Pottery from wells, roads, and other deposits as well as individual vases without significant context, augment the pottery from tombs as the basis of a detailed analysis of Mycenaean pottery. A chapter on historical conclusions deals with all areas of Mycenaean Athens.","Immerwahr, S. A.","1971"