"dc-publisher","dc-subject","dc-description","Redirect","Name","dc-creator","Type","dc-date","dc-title","UserLevel","Icon","Id","Collection","Chronology" "Athens","Coins | By Subject | Animals | Owl","Struck in the region of Olynthos.; ""Athens"", time of Timotheos.","","N 1882","","Coin","15 February 1938","","","","Agora:Coin:N 1882","Agora","363-359 B.C." "","Site | By Area | South | Residential-Industrial Area to West and South of the Areopagus | Archaic Cemetery","Grave XXII in notebook, pp. 2293-2295. No deposit #","","1997.20.0348 (XIX-31)","","Image","June 1939","Inhumation of a male, skeleton AA 71. Cf. Hesperia 20 (1951), p. 104 (Grave 28).","","Agora:Image:1997.20.0348::/Agora/1997/1997.20/1997.20.0348.tif::662::455","Agora:Image:1997.20.0348","Agora","" "","Site | By Area | South | Residential-Industrial Area to West and South of the Areopagus | Archaic Cemetery","Grave XXII in notebook, pp. 2293-2295. No deposit #","","2012.51.0359 (XIX-31)","","Image","June 1939","Inhumation of a male, skeleton AA 71. Cf. Hesperia 20 (1951), p. 104 (Grave 28).","","Agora:Image:2012.51.0359::/Agora/2012/2012.51/2012.51.0359.jpg::2048::1553","Agora:Image:2012.51.0359","Agora","" "","","Agora 30","","Agora 30, s. 338, p. 319","","PublicationPage","","ARV¹ 210, -","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-30-338::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 030/Agora 030 338 (319).png::1438::2048","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-30-338","Agora","500 B.C." "","Architecture | Monument Bases and Tops","One corner hacked away by the house builder. ; From another corner of the same monument as plinth A 3475. In this case, however, the bedding for the foot extended into a second (missing) block. Socket for a right foot.; (Consider the possibility that this block and A 3476 come from the pedestal at the west end of the Middle Stoa, c. 1.30m. to N.E.).; ; ADDENDA ; Comment by Homer A. Thompson, 1966.; ""Plinth for a lion made as a corner akroterion on a grave plot, probably that of Dionysios outside the Dipylon"". Cf. Brueckner (1909), Der Friedhof am Eridanos, pp. 75-83; AA (1965), col. 346, (D. Ohly).; ; Letter by W.B. Dinsmoor Jr. to F. Eckstein, November 1979.; ""The two blocks, A 3475 and A 3476, could not have been originally cut to serve as bases for lions. They are of different lengths, different widths, and (now, at least) different heights. They were probably wall blocks, maybe for a retaining wall, in their first use. The original height of 0.395m. is preserved on the right top of A 3476; the height of the fascia on this short end is 0.177m. (I took the profiles at A and B (see sketch) before I realized the differences in heights. The height of the cyma reversa at B and C is the same - whereas that at A is higher - so on the drawing I dotted the high fascia of 0.177m. above the molding of the second block, A 3475 (at B), in order to have the correct total height of block). This top is picked, to a uniform, level surface. The left side of this block, and all of the other block, have been cut down in height and have very roughly picked top surfaces, much less level. The later picking of the top surface created total heights for the blocks varying from 0.34m to 0.36m. The moldings and sockets were probably cut at this time. The upper fascia varies from 0.115m. to 0.135m. in height. The sockets are 0.045m. to 0.07m. deep in the cut-down block A 3475, and 0.07m. to 0.08m. below the original, higher top surface of A 3476, but only 0.035m. below the cut-down top of that same block. As a result, the floors of the sockets are at different elevations on each of the two blocks. The workmanship throughout is not very happy. It is strange that the right half of A 3476 was not cut down, that the high fascia was made visible along half of the short end.; Incidentally, at the short end of A 3476, Travlos shows a break between the socket and the face of the block (Hesperia 35, 1966, p. 147). In actuality, at the floor level of the socket, the floor continues out to the face of the block for a preserved width of 0.07m. before it is broken (see sketch); this continuation, which obviously was visible at the top of the fascia, is picked as is the rest of the floor.""","","A 3476","","Object","2 September 1964","Statue Plinth","","Agora:Image:2012.56.1397::/Agora/2012/2012.56/2012.56.1397.jpg::2048::1659","Agora:Object:A 3476","Agora","" "","","Agora 30","","Agora 30, s. 117, p. 98","","PublicationPage","","Late Archaic Cup Painters; The Brygos Painter and His Circle","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-30-117::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 030/Agora 030 117 (98).png::1438::2048","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-30-117","Agora","" "","","Agora 19","","Agora 19, s. 20, p. 7","","PublicationPage","","IG I², 870","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-19-20::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 019/Agora 019 020 (7).png::1495::2048","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-19-20","Agora","" "","Architecture | Columns | Ionic","Band of carved decoration above fluting reminiscent of Erechtheion capitals. Top has cutting for lifting, set off center. Band at top consists of lotus and palmette with bead and reel above.; White marble.; Cf. A 4644 (ΒΕ 159).","","A 4643","","Object","29 July 1981","Column Shaft Fragment: Ionic","","Agora:Image:2004.02.0016::/Agora/2004/2004.02/2004.02.0016.tif::868::1061","Agora:Object:A 4643","Agora",""