Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2013
The pottery described below was picked up by Mr. Cuttle and myself on mounds, many of which have been noted by Wace or Rey (locc. citt.). We have retained their numbering, so as to avoid confusion. Of the mounds mentioned by Rey, we visited his 2, 3, 4, 5, but not 1, 6, 7, 8. Of those noted and visited by Wace we re-examined A 3, B 8, B 9 and C 9. Of those noted but not visited by him, we visited B 12, B 13, B 15. We could not identify his B 14. On B 13 we found no sherds at all, and it may be a burial tumulus, like A 3. We also collected sherds from a site (not a mound) in the hills one hour north-east of Gerakiní, shewn us by Mr. Bliss of the Anglo-Hellenic Magnesite Company at Gerakiní, and from three mounds in the Ormylia valley, marked Ormylia 1,2 2, 3 on the map (Pl. VI, 1).
page 30 note 1 References: Wace, , B.S.A. xx. pp. 123–32Google Scholar; Rey, , B.C.H. Vol. xli–xliii. pp. 161–8.Google Scholar
page 30 note 2 The site of Sermyle.
page 30 note 3 Mycenaean here = Late Helladic III.
page 30 note 4 Fig. 1, 7 is part of a ‘tumbler,’ resembling Preh. Thess., Fig. 54 b, the fabric of which (B 3 ε) is closely akin to B 3 δ.
page 31 note 1 On the small mound that lies just south-east of the large mound at Mekyberna (B 8). One fragment is part of the ringed stem of a large goblet.
page 32 note 1 Cited henceforward as ‘Várdino.’
page 32 note 2 Cf. Rey, loc. cit., p. 229.
page 33 note 1 Of the latter one specimen was found at Ormylia 1.
page 34 note 1 Reference: Rey, , B.C.H, xli–xliii. pp. 171–5Google Scholar, with map and three illustrations. This map is here reproduced by the courtesy of M. Rey.
page 34 note 2 Rey's numbering is retained.
page 36 note 1 For a similar handle cf. Rey, op. cit., Pl. IV. 3.