|
| Inscribed fragments.
List of names by tribes and demes.
Fragments ΘΘ 104 and ΘΘ 124 (a) four joining fragments.
Inscribed face only preserved; parts of two columns.
Fragments ΘΘ 121a, ΘΘ 121b, ΘΘ 124b, ... 4th. century B.C ... 4th. century B.C. |
| Inscribed fragments.
Fragment Ι 405 a), the rough picked back preserved; other edges broken.
Inscribed stoichedon.
One uniscribed fragment may belongs with fragment a).
Fragment Υ 15 b), belongs with ... 5th. century B.C ... Hesperia 33 (1964), pp. 17, 18, 19, no. 2, pl. 1 (for fragments a-e) ... Hesperia 27 (1958), p. 157, pl. 45 a (for fragment c) ... Hesperia 37 (1968), p. 237, no. 2, pl. 73. |
| Fragments of inscribed block.
List of names; possibly the list of those who lost their lives at Syracuse.
Fragment Η 419 a), broken away above, below, and to the left. The right side has anathyrosis ... Late 5th. century B.C ... H. a) 0.31, b) 0.37; Lett. H. a) 0.008, b) 0.009, c) 0.008; W. a) 0.33, b ... 0.33 |
An incised five-pointed star, partly broken off at left. A similar star scratched on a late 7th. c. B.C. plate from Smyrna is called an owner's or merchant's mark: L.H. Jeffery, B.S.A. 59, 1964, p. 40, ... Study Collections-Case No. 56-46 |
Decorated with a deep wavy line (F.M. 53); unglazed inside.
Coarse, reddish clay with white grit, possibly non-Attic; dull brown glaze.
Cf. E. French, B.S.A. 59, 1964, p. 247 ... L.H. IIIA ... Hesperia Suppl. 16 (1975), no. 179, p. 53, pl. 16. |
| Inscribed fragment.
Fragment from the upper right corner of a stele with pedimental top.
Broken at left and below. The inscribed face covered with a thick coat of cement.
White marble, apparently Pentelic ... 29 April 1949 ... corner of a stele with ... face covered with a thick |
| Cylindrical. Sides slightly concave.
Raised bands at top and bottom. Flat bottom with three broad shallow legs of which one missing.
Inscription incised around band at top.
See B 1082 BIS.
Μέτρο χαλκού, ... Card: ca. 400 B.C ... Card: ca. 400 B.C. |
Apparently complete in a single letter: A; np letters to either side. Upside down to vessel.
Single alphas are often found on objects dedicated to Athena, undoubtedly as abbreviations of the goddess' ... Study Collections-Case No. 56-46 |
|
|