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Archaeology in Greece, 1936–37

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Gerard M. Young
Affiliation:
The British School, Athens

Extract

Acknowledgements are due to all those who have kindly supplied information and photographs: particularly to Dr. Riemann, of the German Archaeological Institute, who generously gave me a copy of his forthcoming report in Archaeologischer Anzeiger, and allowed me to make free use of it; to Professor G. Oikonomos, the Director of the Greek Archaeological Department; to Professors Shear and Morgan, and others of the American School; to M. Paul Lemerle, the Secretary-General of the French School; to Drs. Hampe and Kübler of the German Institute; and to Dr. Säflund of the Swedish excavations. They are in no way responsible for errors in this account.

Athens and Attica

In August 1937 the National Museum received an acquisition of the first importance. It had been known for some time that a marble kouros had been dug up at Anavysos in Attica by a gang of tomb-robbers in 1932, and smuggled out of the country.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1937

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References

1 From a report kindly supplied by Mr. A. H. S. Megaw, Director of Antiquities.