"dc-subject","dc-publisher","dc-creator","UserLevel","Chronology","dc-title","Redirect","Name","Collection","Id","dc-date","Type","Icon","dc-description" "","","","","Modern Context","Cellar","","N 10:1","Agora","Agora:Deposit:N 10:1","March 1935; March-April 1956","Deposit","","""Fauvel Collection""; Collector's dump? Debris in the cellar of a modern house, probably once that of F.S. Fauvel.; The collection included vases of all periods, from Geometric to Turkish; a number of the pieces are non-Attic and many of them apparently derive from graves. The deposit is thus without chronological significance and without any ancient association with the Agora area.; Compare the similar dumps, K 14:1 and O 17:2." "Mycenaean, Minyan, Neolithic (?)","","","","6th c. B.C. and earlier.","North of Eleusinion: Loose fill in pit outside Roman Building","","T 18:4","Agora","Agora:Deposit:T 18:4","26/06/1959","Deposit","","North of Eleusinion: Loose fill in pit outside Roman Building." "","","","","550-500 B.C.","Well at 51/ΛΖ","","T 19:1","Agora","Agora:Deposit:T 19:1","26 May-5 June 1936","Deposit","","Continuous filling over its mouth and in it to a depth of -7.30m. Clearly the fill thrown in at the time of Archaic Building, to raise the ground level. The last few centimeters of the well represented its brief period of use. ; Below the throw-in filling, and directly over the pottery of the period of use lay half a dozen chips of yellow Kara stone, some with worked surfaces. These are surely to be connected with the construction of the building, with thus must be set sometime within the last quarter of the 6th c. B.C." "","","","","325-300 B.C.","Pit","","A 19:5","Agora","Agora:Deposit:A 19:5","2 May 1940","Deposit","","Pits in area 96-100/ΝΕ-ΝΘ (lower east slopes of Hill of the Nymphs, near extreme west edge of excavated area). ; ; Scanty debris filling in a pit." "","","","","Ca. 600-540 B.C.","Well","","I 16:4","Agora","Agora:Deposit:I 16:4","31 May-14 June 1932","Deposit","","Well at 62/ΙΑ, 63/ΙΑ, at the northwest foot of the Areopagus. Use filling in the lowest meter of the shaft.; The upper part of the shaft was filled with clay containing only occasional fragments of pottery; at the top a small supplementary filling of the Roman period; cf. T 80 from Roman fill above well.; Apparently the well was in use by a household both careful and conservative for something over two generations."