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[Agora Publication] Agora VI: Terracottas and Plastic Lamps of the Roman Period

Grandjouan, C ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... The volume contains a short introduction, a classification by types, a critical catalogue, a register of the dated contexts, concordances and indexes, and an excursus by T. B. L. Webster on the theatrical ... 1961 ... Agora VI

[Agora Publication] Corinth VI: Coins, 1896-1929

Edwards, Katharine M ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Rather than discussing the historical, political, or economic deductions that can be drawn from coins, this report simply presents an illustrated catalogue of all coins found during excavations in Corinth ... 1933

[Agora Publication] Davies (2004): Pylos Regional Archaeological Project, Part VI: Administration and Settlement in Venetian Navarino

Davies, Siriol ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 73.1 1 59-120 10.2307_3182019 ... 2004

[Agora Publication] Thompson, D. B. (1965): Three Centuries of Hellenistic Terracottas: V The Mid-Second Century B.C., VI Late Second Century B.C. to 86 B.C.

Thompson, Dorothy Burr ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 34.1 1 34-71 10.2307_147137 ... 1965

[Agora Publication] Corinth VIII.3: The Inscriptions, 1926-1950

Kent, John Harvey ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... The inscriptions found in the excavations at Corinth between 1926 and 1950 are published here which, although fragmentary, provide significant new evidence for the history of Greece in the Roman period ... 1966

[Agora Publication] Broneer (1956): The North Slope Krater, New Fragments

Broneer, O ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... The calyx-krater of Exekias, first published in 1937,1 was discovered at the bottom of a well in the American School excavations on the North slope of the Acropolis in Athens. The circumstances of discovery ... 1956 ... After the well had been excavated and the possibility of finding more pieces seemed remote, the vase was restored and placed on exhibit in the temporary Agora Museum.3 The following season, however, brought to light two more fragments which were recognized as belonging to the calyx-krater. ... Hesperia, VI, 1937, pp. 469-486. 2.