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Keesling, Catherine M ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 68.4 4 509-548 10.2307_148413 ... 1999 ... Endoios's Painting from the Themistoklean Wall: A Reconstruction |
Wiseman, James R ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 32.3 3 248-275 10.2307_147077 ... 1963 ... A Trans-Isthmian Fortification Wall |
Gates, Charles ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia Supplement 33 27-46 10.2307_1354061 ... 2004 ... The Adoption of Pictorial Imagery in Minoan Wall Painting: A Comparativist Perspective |
Fingarette, A ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 40.3 3 330-335 10.2307_147531 ... 1971 ... A New Look at the Wall of Nikomakhos |
Brecoulaki, Hariclia Zaitoun, Caroline Stocker, Sharon R. Davis, Jack L. Karydas, Andreas G. Colombini, Maria Perla Bartolucci, Ugo ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 77.3 3 363-397 ... 2008 ... An Archer form the Palace of Nestor: A New Wall-Painting Fragment in the Chora Museum |
| Frantz, M. A ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... The Church of the Holy Apostles stands at an important crossroads in the southeast corner of the area of the ancient Agora. The earliest church on the site, built over a wall of the 5th-century B.C. Mint ... 1971 ... The earliest church on the site, built over a wall of the 5th-century B.C. ... The original plan was revealed as a tetraconch cross-in-square with dome on pendentives carried on arches supported by four freestanding columns, the west of the four apses penetrating into the narthex. Fifteen tombs of this first period were excavated under the floor of the church proper and the narthex. In a second period, probably in the late 17th or early 18th century, repairs after damage from the 1687 fighting made changes in the narthex and dome and the interior was covered with paintings. |
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 ... 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. ... Had the fragments been thrown over the Acropolis wall together with other debris, it is unlikely that so many could have found their way together into the same well.2 Some of the fragments, however, were lost on the way down; about a third of the vase is still missing. ... The lively action of this figure is unrelated to the peaceful scene above, where a nymph is seated beneath a spreading vine. |
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