Agora Publication: Corinth VII.2
Title:   Archaic Corinthian Pottery and the Anaploga Well
Author:   Amyx, Darrell A.
    Lawrence, Patricia
Abstract:   In the first section of this book, Amyx catalogues and discusses more than 200 fragments of Archaic Corinthian pottery with figure decoration, selected from those previously unpublished or inadequately published. The authors have also given attention to vase-painters of the Protocorinthian and Corinthian periods who were previously known chiefly from works exported in antiquity, and have succeeded in establishing the importance of the Corinth Museum as a center for the study of the Corinthian Style. In the second section, Lawrence presents the contents of a well dug and filled in the Archaic period. The material ranges from Early Protocorinthian to Late Corinthian and includes an important body of material from a potters' dump, here treated separately. Shape development and chronology have been established, especially for oinochoai and kotylai, based on the long series of stratified examples. Other material in the fill includes coarse ware and fragmentary fine ware. The authors attribute a number of pieces to known and newly identified vase-painters.
Series Title:   Corinth
Publication Place:   Princeton
Publisher:   American School of Classical Studies at Athens
Volume:   7.2
Date:   1975
Page:   iii-v+vii-xvi+1+3-61+63-177
Jstor:   http://www.jstor.org/stable/4390660
Google:   http://books.google.com/books?id=Un7g1i4ApCUC
DOI:   10.2307_4390660
    10.2307_4390661
References:   Publication Pages (305)