Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T20:27:36.886Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Archaeology in Greece, 1945–1947

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

J. M. Cook
Affiliation:
The British Schoolat Athens

Extract

Archaeological activity has been resumed in the last two years despite abnormal conditions in Greece. Under Prof. A. Keramopoullos' direction the Greek Archaeological Service, seriously understaffed in consequence of the war years, is bravely confronting the problem of restoring its museums and monuments and administering a provincial ephorate now increased by the acquisition of the Dodecanese. The British and American Schools in Athens are open once more and many students have returned to pursue their researches. The British School has confined its field work to tasks of conservation in Knossos and Ithaca; but the Americans have resumed full-scale activity in preparing the ground for the new Agora Museum and intensified their study of previous finds at Corinth. The French School, with a full complement of students, has continued its investigations on a diversity of sites prior to the celebration (postponed by one year) of its Centenary in September 1947.

Field work on any single site (with the special exception of the Agora) has been confined to the employment of five workmen for thirty days—a measure designed to permit necessary works of conservation but to preclude fresh digging in view of the inadequacy of the Greek Archaeological Service. When this ban is lifted excavation in Greece will be resumed; and though activity may still be somewhat restricted because of banditry in the countryside and the unfavourable exchange rate, it is hoped that the year 1948 will show substantial results.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1946

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Broneer, O., Hesperia VIII 317 ffGoogle Scholar.

2 The Mycenaean Pottery and The Chronology of Mycenaean Pottery (Stockholm, 1941)Google Scholar; Opuscula Archaeologica III 194 ffGoogle Scholar.

3 BSA XLII 1 ffGoogle Scholar.

4 Published in Hesperia, Shear Memorial Supplement.

5 Hesperia II 470, fig. 19Google Scholar.

6 Hesperia IX 274 ffGoogle Scholar.

7 This discovery is reported more fully by Mrs. E. P. Blegen in her news items from Athens in AJA for 1947.

8 Cf. the illustrations of details in BCH LXVIII–LXIX 427, figs. 4–5Google Scholar.

9 Cf. AA 1940, 139, figs. 13–14.

10 Cf. BCH LXIII 288, Pl. 52, LXVIII–LXIX 424, fig. 1Google Scholar.

11 Cf. Hadzidakis, M.ByZ. Neugr. Jahrb. XVII 174206Google Scholar.

12 Cf. Ras, S.BCH LXVIII 163 ffGoogle Scholar.

13 I am indebted to Dr. C. Weickert for these illustrations, and to N. Kotzias, Ephor of Attica, for the permission to print them. The fragment top right is from a closed vase.

14 In BSA XLII.

15 Greek Walls (Harvard, 1941), cf. p. 194Google Scholar.

16 I am indebted to Ph. Petsas, who has assumed the duties of Ephor, for this intelligence.

17 Cf. Ἐφημ. 1933, 42–44.

18 Kallipolitis, B. and Lazaridis, D.Ἀρχαῖαι Ἐπιγραφαὶ ϴεσσλονίκης (Salonica, 1946)Google Scholar.

19 Works of Art in Greece, Losses and Survivals (London, H.M.S.O., 1946), p. 21Google Scholar, Pl. opp. p. 28; cf. BCH LXVIII–LXIX 430, fig. 6Google Scholar.

20 (Salonica, 1946)Google Scholar.

21 Ἑλληνικὰ Ἀμφίγλυφα (Salonica, 1946).

22 AJA XXXVI 512 ffGoogle Scholar.

23 Cf. Mrs.Blegen's, summary News Items in AJA for 1947Google Scholar.

24 Ἐφημ. 1931, 48, figs. 27–9.

25 Cf. H. Bossert Altkreta 3 figs. 416–17.

26 Cf. Annali d. Inst. 1862 Pl. C; Wrede, W.AM LIII 84Google Scholar.

27 For this excavation cf. AA. 1939 261, BCH LXII 480Google Scholar. Kondoleon points out that the place of origin of the relief pithoi on Tenos was ascertained by Mr. Karouzos, while he himself carried out the excavation with Karouzos' assent.

28 Fr. Hiller von Gaertringen IG XII 3 p. 213, no. 1149, contra Smith, C. H.JHS XVII 5, no. 7Google Scholar.

29 Vallois, R.L'architecture helléniqve et hellénistique à Délos I. (1944) 10 ffGoogle Scholar.

30 Cf. R. Vallois op. cit. 50 f.

31 Durrbach, F.Choix d'inscriptions de Délos 7, no. 8Google Scholar.

32 JHS LXV 102Google Scholar.

33 Boxes numbered in Guide to the Strat. Museum G.I. 1, L.III. 2 (one box), V. 1930. T.P. (at least one box): also U.III, U.VI, U.VIII (one box each).

34 Cf. BCH LX 484, fig. 25Google Scholar.

35 Ἐφημ. 1904 Pl. 3.

36 Cf. Κρητικὰ Χρονικά I 219 ff.

37 More detailed reports on archaeological activities in Crete will be found in the first volume of the new journal Κρητικὰ Χρονικά.

38 This report takes up the tale from the summary in JHS LIX 206 ffGoogle Scholar. I am indebted to A. H. S. Megaw and P. Dikaios of the Cyprus Dept. of Antiquities for supplying the information.

39 Cf. Iraq VII (1940) 76 ffGoogle Scholar.

40 Cf. Dikaios, Excavations at Erimi 63Google Scholar.

41 For a general account of this sequence see Dikaios, Iraq VII 69 ffGoogle Scholar. and Guide to the Cyprus Museum (1947) 1 ffGoogle Scholar.

42 For the discovery of the Mycenaean town in 1934 see Missions en Chypre, p. 83 ff. Cf. also RA XXVII (1947) 129Google Scholar.

43 Nicosia, 1947, 3s.