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Excavations at Haliartos, 1926, Part II
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2013
Extract
In the last volume of the Annual a report was given on the work done at Haliartos in 1926. It was not possible at that time to publish the excavation exhaustively as the finds had not been thoroughly examined, but I have recently made a further study of them, and have prepared this supplementary paper to bring the publication up to date. The finds are here catalogued and discussed under their several sections, and the conclusions derived from them are set out in the summary at the end.
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- Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 1927
References
page 128 note 1 Easter 1928. I should have stated in the previous article that the work was originally carried out with funds from a Travelling Studentship of London University. My journey to Greece this year for the purpose of preparing this paper was facilitated by a grant from the Research Committee of Birmingham University. I must record my indebtedness to the Director of the British School for advice and assistance throughout, to Professor P. N. Ure for criticism of the section on Pottery, and to Mr. Karouzos, Ephor of Boeotia, for the hospitality of his house at Thebes while I was making my notes on the finds.
page 131 note 1 Another is illustrated in Baur, , Stoddard Collection, p. 70Google Scholar, Fig. 16, No. 178.
page 131 note 2 The suggestion that the sherd came from a Boeotian vase of the type named was made in 1926 by Professor Ure, to whom I sent a drawing. More recently, after comparing it with other examples of the type, he is of opinion that very possibly it is Boeotian. Mr. Payne takes the same view. However, no exact parallel can be cited.
page 131 note 3 For illustration of similar stamped ware, see Ure, , Black Glaze Pottery from Rhitsona, Plate XIII. No. 59, 16Google Scholar.
page 131 note 4 Ibid., p. 29.
page 134 note 1 [In this connection I venture to cite a suggestion made to me by Professor A. D. Keramopoullos, of the University of Athens, à propos of an archaic terracotta head from Sparta with a cylindrical projection below, that such heads may have been inserted into bodies made of wax and dressed in ‘doll's clothes.’—A. M. W.]
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