icon

[Agora Object] A 3621: Sima Section with Lion's Head Spout

Full height and width preserved, full length undeterminable. The lion lacks most of its lower jaw and the right ear. A painted face of acanthus alternating with palmettes; below, a border of maeander ... 7 July 1967

icon

[Agora Object] S 1728: Grave Relief Fragment

Back and right edge preserved. Roughly picked. Draped standing female figure, Isis article. Preserved, shoulders to thighs; right arm missing. Pentelic marble. Pre-war marble pile from south side of section ... Early Antonine period.

icon

[Agora Object] A 2351: Lion's Head Spout

Broken all around. Part of ear, hair and edge of face preserved. Tip of ear and of locks missing. Brownish buff clay; fine cream colored surface for face. Yellow paint on hair. (Not same series as other ... 2 June 1953

icon

[Agora Object] S 1727: Grave Relief Fragment

Heavy frame on right side, and back preserved. A little of the drapery of a large scale figure preserved at left; at right, in smaller scale and much lower relief, part of the figure of an attendant; short ... May 1953

icon

[Agora Object] A 4214: Column Base: Engaged

Two joining pieces; complete except for chips. a) Section of base for pilaster. Moldings above plinth are, from bottom: torus, scotia with projecting crowning fillet, torus. Large square empolion cutting ... 10 May 1971

icon

[Agora Object] A 2330: Cornice Fragment

Greatest part of one mutule preserved with right and back edge and lower part of the molding above; eight guttae preserved; some completely, some partly, and traces of four more. Heavy Roman cement preserved ... May 1953

[Agora Object] A 2320: Cornice Fragment

Fragment of mutule and two guttae. Original top. Broken at front, back, and right end. Joint surface at left. Half of mutule on next block. Via partly preserved at right. Light buff poros with holes in ... 12 May 1953

icon

[Agora Object] S 1260: Head of a Cock

Comb and beak chipped. At neckline, a somewhat rough-finished surface at obtuse angel with head, and a small hole for attachment, suggesting that the head was part of a group, and faced somewhat left ... 500-480 B.C (?).