Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
There is so much to record from Greece proper and the islands, that it will be necessary to omit Asia Minor from the scope of the present article. It has been a year of surprises, from the episode of the sponge-diver knocking at the door of the Minister of Education to report a shipload of statues lying under the sea, to the rediscovery of Aphaea, the unknown goddess who emerged the other day from the pages of Pausanias and Antoninus Liberalis to receive the honours due to her in the famous temple on Aegina.
In describing the results of excavations it is convenient to begin as I did last year with the prehistoric period and with Crete, where a number of workers, two Italians, two Americans, seven Englishmen, have been exploring early sites. The French School has not excavated there this year, but has organized a geographical expedition under the leadership of M. Ardaillon which is to make a much-needed survey of the island.
1 Dr. Staes tells me that the only bronze hitherto found in the excavations was in the form of ornaments, as if the metal were rare. A prehistoric tomb opened by Dr. Tsountas in the same neighbourhood contained a pair of bracelets of bronze overlaid with gold.