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Archaeology in Greece 1938–39
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
Extract
Thanks are due to all those who have contributed towards this summary—in particular to Dr. Marinatos and other officials of the Greek Archaeological Department, and to various members of the American, French, German and Italian Schools of Archaeology at Athens. The material was collected by the Director of the British School, but other duties prevented him from writing it up.
The year was one of exceptional achievement, and held promise of more to come. The palace of Nestor at Pylos, the treasure at Delphi, the further finds at Olympia, Dendra and Mycenae, the ashlar beehive tomb at Isopata, the Mycenaean tomb on the slope of the Areopagos, and the exploration of Thermopylae are all discoveries of unusual interest and importance, and the further development of some of them would, in normal times, have been eagerly awaited.
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- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1939
References
1 JHS lviii, 237 ffGoogle Scholar.
2 Syria, 1932, xiii, 345 ffGoogle Scholar.
3 Macalister, , Excavations at Gezer ii, 381 ffGoogle Scholar.
4 See Report of the Department of Antiquities of Cyprus, 1936, i, 78Google Scholar.
5 Metropolitan Museum Bulletin, xxxiii, 81Google Scholar.