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| Seven fragments. Plain maeander, left, below figured zone. Inside unglazed.
a) Preserves the wall of the vase from the top of the lower cylindrical portion to near the top of the figured zone. Parts of ... 19-23 March 1936 ... inscription, painted in red.
b) Part |
Three non-joining fragments, a + b + e and c with rim and wall as well as start of handle, d of wall. Reserved line at top of rim. Some of the drawing abraded. P.H. a/b/e) 0.118; est. diam. at rim 0.17; ... Ca. 430 B.C ... plektron; inscription; vine and |
Mended with small missing pieces restored in plaster and painted, handle B/A completely modern. Glaze flaked slightly on outside. Top of rim reserved. H. 0.103; diam. of rim 0.29; diam. of tondo 0.113; ... Ca. 510-500 B.C ... inscriptions.
Part resembles |
| About half of vase preserved, mended from many fragments, most of which unite to form one side of the body of the bowl (a); ten more form a fragment from the top of the bowl and the rim (b). Bowl rounded ... 9 March 1932 ... the inscriptions. The |
Medicine Bottle.
Handle and half of neck and mouth missing.
Flat base with string marks. Irregular, barrel-shaped body with slightly angular shoulder. Short, thick neck; plain, slightly outturned rim ... Context of late 1st century B.C. and 1st century after Christ ... inscription seems to confirm that |
| The base has been hacked away on top and in the back; great, rough cuttings extend from the central rectangular cutting on the top, presumably made when the base was first cut, to support what ever stood ... 4th c. B.C ... inscription |
| Mended from many pieces; parts of cup and rim, all of one handle and part of the other and most of the foot, restored in plaster. The preserved fragment of the foot does not join directly. Offset rim; ... August-September 1932 ... inscription (in two lines, |
Profile complete. Mended with the missing pieces restored in plaster and painted, notably most of one side of the bowl, about half of the other, both handles. H. 0.077; rest. diam. at rim 0.185; diam ... Ca. 500 B.C ... Red: inscription.
For the |
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