"dc-description","Name","Chronology","dc-publisher","dc-subject","dc-title","Id","UserLevel","Type","dc-date","Collection","Redirect","dc-creator","Icon" "","P 20955","","","","","Agora:Card:P-20955-1","","Card","","Agora","","","Agora:Card:P-20955-1::/Agora/Cards/P 20xxx/P-20955-1.jpg::2048::1406" "Filling over Floor of Square Peristyle (beneath Stoa).; 122 stamped amphora handles. Many parallels with handles from cistern M 21:1. Latest coin dates ca. 200. latest lamp types 33 A and 34 A. Fragment of long-petal bowl probably intrusive, possibly from building fill of Stoa of Attalos.","Q 8-9:1","200 B.C.","","","Filling over Floor of Square Peristyle","Agora:Deposit:Q 8-9:1","","Deposit","1949, 1950","Agora","","","" "AMS","2012.77.1876 (91-9-12)","","","","","Agora:Image:2012.77.1876","","Image","","Agora","","","Agora:Image:2012.77.1876::/Agora/2012/2012.77/2012.77.1876.jpg::2048::1398" "AMS","2012.75.1784 (87-14-10)","","","","","Agora:Image:2012.75.1784","","Image","","Agora","","","Agora:Image:2012.75.1784::/Agora/2012/2012.75/2012.75.1784.jpg::2048::1340" "One handle, most of rim, and over half of body and foot restored; full profile preserved.; ; Slightly beveled resting surface; convex underside. Two grooves halfway up lower body. Angular profile. Metallic black glaze.","Agora XXIX, no. 397","Ca. 200","","Hellenistic Pottery and Wheelmade Table Ware | Drinking Cups | Two-Handled Cup | Imitation Knidian Cup","","Agora:Object:Agora XXIX:397","","Object","","Agora","","","" "Agora 29","Agora 29.1, s. 323, p. 284","200 B.C.; 200-175 B.C.; 175 B.C.; 175-165 B.C.; Late 2nd-early 1st B.C.; 175-150 B.C.; 225-210 B.C.; 150-110 B.C.","","","Cistern","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-323","","PublicationPage","","Agora","","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-323::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 029.1/Agora 029.1 323 (284).png::1528::2048" "Agora 29","Agora 29.1, s. 578, p. 539","","","","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-578","","PublicationPage","","Agora","","","Agora:PublicationPage:Agora-29.1-578::/Agora/Publications/Agora/Agora 029.1/Agora 029.1 578 (539).png::1519::2048" "The Stoa of Attalos now covers the remains several centuries of previous occupation. Mycenaean and Protogeometric burials represent the early use of the area. By the Late Geometric period, the presence of a few wells indicates a shift to domestic occupation; others containing 6th-century material suggest the presence of workshops and commercial activity as well as houses. The earliest physical remains are those of an Archaic altar; some rubble structures may have been hastily built by refugees during the Peloponnesian War. At the end of the 5th century, a group of public buildings was constructed, perhaps to house some of the lawcourts. About 300 B.C., these were replaced by an imposing structure, the Square Peristyle, which could have housed four lawcourts simultaneously, each with a jury of 500. Still unfinished when it was dismantled in the first quarter of the second century B.C., its materials were carefully reused in other projects, especially in South Stoa II.; ; The evidence for these centuries is now limited to the meticulous records of the excavators and the finds now stored in the Stoa of Attalos, where some few remains still in situ are visible in the basement. The author’s success in making a coherent and orderly presentation rests on the care and diligence of the excavators as well as his own painstaking search through the records. The physical reconstruction is accompanied by a catalogue of archtitectural blocks; the discussion of the chronology is supported by the stratigraphic evidence and a catalogue of pottery.","Agora XXVII","","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","","The East Side of the Agora: The Remains beneath the Stoa of Attalos","Agora:Publication:Agora 27","","Publication","1995","Agora","","Townsend, R. F.","Agora:Image:2009.09.0058::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0058.jpg::200::267" "The second of two volumes on the Hellenistic fine ware unearthed in excavations in the Athenian Agora, this book presents the Hellenistic wheelmade table ware and votive vessels found between 1931 and 1982, some 1,500 Attic and 300 imported pieces. An introductory section includes chapters devoted to fixed points in the chronology of the pottery, to a general discussion of the decoration of Hellenistic pots, both stamped and painted, or “West Slope,” and to the question of workshops. The author dedicates much of the text to a typology of Attic Hellenistic fine ware, carefully examining the origins, development, chronology, forms, and decoration of each shape. The ordering of the material by function rather than by the form of vessels provides insight into life in Hellenistic Athens. Especially important is the development of a chronological framework that builds upon and refines the author’s earlier work in this area.","Agora XXIX","","American School of Classical Studies at Athens","","Hellenistic Pottery Athenian and Imported Wheelmade Table Ware and Related Material","Agora:Publication:Agora 29","","Publication","1997","Agora","","Rotroff, S.","Agora:Image:2009.09.0055::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0055.jpg::366::500"