Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T01:11:28.324Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Pennsylvania University Museum's Demeter and Persephone Sanctuary Project at Cyrene: A Final Progress Report?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2015

D. White*
Affiliation:
University Museum, University of Pennsylvania

Extract

Trigeminated at more or less the same time as the First of September Revolution and the appearance of the first published report from The Society for Libyan Studies, the excavation phase of the extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone project at Cyrene ran until 1978 when it was stopped in order to begin work on final publication. The intervening years have seen a degree of progress, and this retrospective vicenary issue of Libyan Studies provides a welcome opportunity to take stock of what has been and is going on. The journal's readers will already have some familiarity with the broad outlines of the sanctuary project, since summary articles have been published in an earlier issue (White 1978) and elsewhere (Vickers and Reynolds 1972; Kane 1979; Humphrey 1980; White 1981). In addition reviews of the three published volumes of the final report (White 1984; Schaus 1985; Lowenstam et al. 1987) have appeared here with exemplary promptitude (Lloyd 1985; Boardman 1986; Fulford 1988), as well as externally (Brown 1986; Tomlinson 1986; Cook 1987). The present article's bibliographical citations list what has been written about the sanctuary, but omit the series of preliminary reports in Libya Antiqua (between Vols. 8 and 16) and American Journal of Archaeology (Vols. 78 and 80), whose inclusion would be redundant, as would be any attempt to minute the contents of the reviewed final study volumes. Instead my present intention is to give a short report on work in progress and to summarise the results of what has already been published in separate studies outside the framework of the final publication.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Libyan Studies 1989

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

Boardman, J. 1986. Review of J. Schaus, The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, II. In Libyan Studies 17: 172173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, S. 1986. Review of White, D., The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, I. In The American Journal of Archaeology 90: 358360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buttrey, T. V. 1987. Crete and Cyrenaica. British Archaeological Reports 326: 165174.Google Scholar
Cook, R. 1987. Review of Schaus, J., The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, II. In The Journal of Hellenic Studies 107 (1987): 255256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crabtree, P. and Monge, J. 1987. The faunal remains from the Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya. MASCA Journal 4, No. 3: 139143.Google Scholar
Fulford, M. 1988. Review of Lowenstam et al., The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, III. In Libyan Studies 19: 154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herz, N., Kane, S. and Hayes, W. 1985. Isotopic analysis of sculpture from the Cyrene Demeter Sanctuary. In England, P. and van Zelst, L. (eds.), Applications of Science in Examination of works of Art. Boston, Museum of Fine Arts: 142150.Google Scholar
Herz, N., Kane, S. and Hayes, W. forthcoming. In Proceedings of the Fifth International Colloquium on Science and the Examination of Works of Art (MFA, Boston).Google Scholar
Humphrey, J. 1980. North African News Letter 2. The American Journal of Archaeology 84: 7980.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kane, S. 1977a. A report on the votive sculpture and portrait sculpture from the Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone in Wadi Bel Gadir, Cyrene (Shahat). Society for Libyan Studies Eighth Annual Report: 1518.Google Scholar
Kane, S. 1977b. Sculpture from the 1976 season of excavations in the Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene. Libya Antiqua XIII–XIV: 313330.Google Scholar
Kane, S. 1979. The Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone in Cyrene, Libya. Archaeology 32, No. 2: 57.Google Scholar
Kane, S. 1980. An archaic kore from Cyrene. American Journal of Archaeology 84: 182183.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kane, S. 1985. Sculpture from the Cyrene Demeter Sanctuary in its Mediterranean context. In Barker, G., Lloyd, J. and Reynolds, J. (eds.), Cyrenaica in Antiquity, Society for Libyan Studies Occasional Papers I: British Archaeological Reports International Series 236: 237247.Google Scholar
Kane, S. in press. Sculpture from Cyrene in its Mediterranean context. In Fant, C. (ed.), Ancient Quarrying and Trade: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Kane, S. and Carrier, S. 1982. Computer analysis of statuary finds from the Demeter Sanctuary at Cyrene. American Journal of Archaeology 86: 258.Google Scholar
Kane, S. and Carrier, S. in press. Relationships between style and size in statuary and the availability of marble at Cyrene. In Herz, N. and Waelkins, M. (eds.), Marble in Ancient Greece and Rome: Geology, Quarries, Commerce, Artifacts.Google Scholar
Kane, S. and Reynolds, J. 1985. ‘The kore who looks after the grain’: A copy of the Torlonia-Hierapytna type in Cyrene. American Journal of Archaeology 89: 455463.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, J. 1985. Review of White, D., The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, I. Libyan Studies 16: 115117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowenstam, S., Moore, M., Kenrick, P. and Fuller, T. 1987. The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, III; Engraved Finger-Rings; Attic B.F. and Black Pattern Pottery; Hellenistic and Roman Fine Wares; Conservation of Objects. Philadelphia, University Museum Monograph 66.Google Scholar
McPhee, I. 1979. An Apulian oinochoe and the robbery of Heracles. Antike Kunst 22, heft I: 3842.Google Scholar
Reese, D. 1988. A new tridacna shell from Kish. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 47, No. 1: 3641.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaus, G. 1979. A foreign vase painter in Sparta. American Journal of Archaeology 83: 102106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaus, G. 1980. Greek trade along the North African coast in the sixth century B.C. Scripta Mediterranea I: 2127.Google Scholar
Schaus, G. 1985. The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, II: The East Greek, Island and Laconian Pottery. Philadelphia, University Museum Monograph 56.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, R. 1986. Review of White, D., The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, I. The Journal of Hellenic Studies 106: 246247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uhlenbrock, J. 1985. Terracotta figurines from the Demeter Sanctuary at Cyrene: models for trade. In Barker, G., Lloyd, J. and Reynolds, J. (eds.) Cyrenaica in Antiquity, Society for Libyan Studies Occasional Papers I: British Archaeological Reports International Series 236: 297304.Google Scholar
Uhlenbrock, J. 1989 (forthcoming). The Terracotta Protomai from Gela: A Discussion of Local Style in Archaic Sicily. (Studia Archaeologica 50). Rome, ‘L'Erma’ di Bretscheneider.Google Scholar
Vickers, M. and Reynolds, J. 1972. Cyrenaica 1962-72. Archaeological Reports for 1971-72: 3536.Google Scholar
Warden, P., Oliver, J., Crabtree, P. and Monge, J. 1989 (forthcoming). The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, IV: Miscellaneous Small Finds; Faunal Remains; Glass. Philadelphia, University Museum Monograph 67.Google Scholar
White, D. 1973. Two girls from Cyrene. Opuscula Romana IX: 24: 207215.Google Scholar
White, D. 1975. Archaic Cyrene and the cult of Demeter and Persephone. Expedition 17, No. 4: 215.Google Scholar
White, D. 1978. Wadi Bel Gadir Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone, Cyrene. Society for Libyan Studies Ninth Annual Report 3141.Google Scholar
White, D. 1981. Cyrene's Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone: a summary of a decade of excavation, American Journal of Archaeology 85: 1330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, D. 1984. The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, I: Background and Introduction to the Excavations. Philadelphia, University Museum Monograph 52.Google Scholar
White, D. 1985. Cyrene's suburban expansion south of its rampart. In Barker, G., Lloyd, J. and Reynolds, J. (eds.), Cyrenaica in Antiquity, Society for Libyan Studies Occasional Papers I: British Archaeological Reports International Series 236: 105120.Google Scholar
White, D. 1987. Demeter Libyssa, her Cyrenean cult in light of the recent excavations. Quaderni di archeologia della Libia 12: 6784.Google Scholar
White, D., Bald, I., Schenk, L., Tutweiler, S., MacDonald, B., Schaus, G., Bloom, M., Chance-Vellucci, K. 1976. Seven recently discovered sculptures from Cyrene, eastern Libya. Expedition 18, No. 2: 1432.Google Scholar