"Name","dc-subject","dc-publisher","Redirect","Id","Chronology","dc-date","Type","dc-title","Icon","UserLevel","Collection","dc-description","dc-creator" "L 2:2","a) rubbly fill (Lot 482)","","","Agora:Deposit:L 2:2","","11-19 July 2006; 24 June-21 July 2009","Deposit","Well","Agora:Image:2011.15.0008::/Agora/2011/2011.15/2011.15.0008.tif::3816::2886","","Agora","Adjacent to the SW face of Byzantine Wall 14. The circular cutting, 0.90m in diameter, appeared at 53.504m under a layer of loose rubble (Lot 481). Wall of the well roughly built, consisting at the top of several courses of large tiles (placed horizontally) and flat stones, including marble blocks. Lower down, from 52.621m, large segments of terracotta well lining tiles are interspersed with other building materials. These lining segments are probably reused: one has a cutout triangular foothold; other have cutout rectangular footholds; one is marked with π incised twice. Most are broken; a complete segment measures 0.39 by 0.65m.","Anne McCabe" "Stoa Poikile","Site | By Area | North | Stoa Poikile","","","Agora:Monument:Stoa Poikile","500-450 B.C.","","Monument","","Agora:Image:2008.20.0086::/Agora/2008/2008.20/2008.20.0086.tif::2953::1943","","Agora","Social, Military Display, Museum","" "2007 Excavations","Checked","","","Agora:Report:2007 Excavations","","13 Jun-3 Aug 2007","Report","Preliminary Report on the 2007 Excavation Season","Agora:Image:2008.01.0487::/Agora/2008/2008.01/2008.01.0487.tif::2850::2266","","Agora","Excavation continued this year in the sections ΒΖ, ΒΗ and Γ.; In Section ΒΖ South, two areas were investigated: the north-south road and the areas west of the road. In the road, hard-packed gravel surfaces were taken out, and the later water supply lines, one of terracotta and two of lead, were fully exposed. More of the deep street drain and another subsidiary channel entering it from the west, were cleared. All these channels were in use in the 4th or 5th centuries A.D. To the west, Hellenistic and Classical levels were excavated, and a pyre buried under a floor was exposed, dating to the late 4th or early 3rd century B.C. ; In Section ΒΖ North, mostly Classical and Hellenistic levels in and behind the Classical commercial building were excavated. More of its eastern back wall was exposed, along with several cross-walls. It seems to have been a building of at least six rooms/shops set side-by-side along the street. A draw-shaft and part of the tunnel of a Hellenistic cistern complex was found outside the building to the east. The tunnel may lead to a collapsed cistern located within the building itself.; In Section Γ, the excavation of the building identified as the Strategeion continued. Well preserved floor levels in the eastern part of the building were excavated, including a pit full of marble chips overlying a pit filled with several amphorae. Excavation in other fills went down to late 8th and early 7th centuries B.C. Further east, the exploration of a series of small irregular buildings started.; In Section BH, the last of the 10th/11th century walls and other Byzantine installations were cleared and excavation continued into late Roman fills. More of the back wall of the presumed Stoa Poikile was found. The new parts consist of two adjacent orthostate blocks from the outer face of the back wall of the building and a limestone unfluted column shaft in the interior Ionic column of the stoa.","John McK. Camp II"