{"responseHeader":{"status":0,"QTime":5,"params":{"facet.field":"Type","q.alt":"*:*","hl":"false","indent":"false","fl":"Redirect,dc-subject,dc-creator,Chronology,Icon,dc-publisher,dc-description,dc-date,Type,Collection,Id,Mugshots,Name,UserLevel,dc-title","hl.fragsize":"25","start":"0","fq":["UserGroup:Public","","Type:Publication","Collection:Agora"],"sort":"Sort_s asc","rows":"20","hl.snippets":"3","q":"","hl.mergeContiguous":"true","mlt":"false","spellcheck":"false","hl.fl":"","facet":"true","wt":"json","debugQuery":"false","spellcheck.collate":"true"}},"response":{"numFound":2266,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"Name":["Agora I"],"dc-date":["1953"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["Presented in catalogue form are 64 portrait heads, headless torsos, and fragments (of both categories) ranging in date from the first half of the 1st century B.C. to the 5th century A.D. The catalogue is preceded by an introduction dealing with “finding-places,” “material,” “forms of portraits,” and “subjects.” Special emphasis is placed on stylistic criteria for dating each work, and the more interesting examples are discussed in some detail. There are not many great works of art illustrated, but many interesting types. As the author says in her introduction, “the Agora portraits interest us, not because they are unique, but because they are representative.”","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","1","iii-vii+ix+xi-xiv+1-114","978-0-87661-201-9","79280508","10.2307_3601956","10.2307_3601957"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 1","dc-creator":["Harrison, E. B."],"Type":"Publication","dc-title":["Portrait Sculpture"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0031::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0031.jpg::104::150"]},{"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0032::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0032.jpg::104::150"],"dc-title":["Coins from the Roman through the Venetian Period"],"Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Thompson, M."],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 2","dc-description":["Of the 55,492 coins that were recovered from the Athenian Agora during excavations from 1931 to 1949, this catalogue presents 37,000. These range in date from the last century of the Roman Republic to the declining years of the Republic of Venice. As the short historical survey that introduces the book indicates, this volume is intended to be a tabulation rather than study. It was written to provide prompt publication of the material excavated, and the catalogue is clear, fully documented, and easy to refer to.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","2","iii-x+1-122","978-0-87661-202-6","607603","10.2307_3601952","10.2307_3601953"],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"dc-date":["1954"],"Name":["Agora II"]},{"dc-title":["Literary and Epigraphical Testimonia"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0033::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0033.jpg::200::267"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 3","Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Wycherley, R. E."],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["Here are presented all the ancient written references, both literary and epigraphical, to the Agora (including its environs) and its monuments. The introduction summarizes chronologically the authors cited, evaluating the contributions of each. The texts are given in the original Greek or Latin, followed by a translation and a commentary. They are grouped in parts: the Stoas, Shrines, Public Buildings and Offices, Market, Honorary Statues, Miscellaneous including Boundaries, Trees, Kerameikos, Panathenaic Street, Old Agora. Within each part the monuments are arranged alphabetically and under each monument the texts are listed alphabetically by author with inscriptions at the end. Many texts not given numbers in this order are included in the archaeological and topographical commentaries. Each section on a monument opens with a brief synopsis of the evidence contained in the texts which follow. The index of authors gives dates and editions as well as passages and inscriptions cited, and is followed by an index of subjects. The plates show plans of the Agora and its environs and of the route of Pausanias.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","3","iii-vii+ix-x+1-259","978-0-87661-203-3","10.2307_3601954","10.2307_3601955"],"dc-date":["1957"],"Name":["Agora III"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"]},{"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"dc-date":["1958"],"Name":["Agora IV"],"dc-description":["The author has used the trustworthy chronological data supplied by the scientific excavation of “closed deposits” at the Athenian Agora to build a continuous series of lamp types from the 7th century B.C. to the 1st century A.D. Many photographs and profiles of sections permit ready identification, and a handy graphical chart of lamp types facilitates quick checking of the chronological range of each.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","4","ii-v+vii-ix+1-5+7-252","978-0-87661-204-0","10.2307_3601958","10.2307_3601959"],"Collection":["Agora"],"Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Howland, R. H."],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 4","Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0034::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0034.jpg::104::150"],"dc-title":["Greek Lamps and Their Survivals"]},{"dc-title":["Pottery of the Roman Period: Chronology"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0036::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0036.jpg::104::150"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 5","Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Robinson, H. S."],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["A group of closed deposits, ranging in date from the 1st century B.C. to the early 7th century A.D., provide evidence for the relative and absolute chronology of pottery used during many centuries of Roman domination—from the sack of Athens by Sulla in 86 B.C. to the Byzantine period. A descriptive catalogue divides the pottery into eight groups, arranged into chronologically differentiated layers. Prefacing the catalogue of each group, a brief general description gives the location, chronological limitations, basis for dating, etc., and then the individual items are described in considerable detail.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","5","iii-vii+ix-xiv+1-149","978-0-87661-205-7","619200","10.2307_3601960","10.2307_3601961"],"dc-date":["1959"],"Name":["Agora V"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"]},{"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["The volume contains a short introduction, a classification by types, a critical catalogue, a register of the dated contexts, concordances and indexes, and an excursus by T. B. L. Webster on the theatrical figurines. Nearly half of the 1,100 items are illustrated with photographs. The subjects of the (mostly fragmentary) figurines are revealing. To the Greek deities of earlier times are added Oriental figures like Serapis, Isis, Harpokrates, Attis, as well as Egyptian priests and Asiatic dancers. The molded “plastic” lamps that are included in this volume were probably made in the same workshops as the figurines.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","6","iii-v+vii+ix+xi-xii+1-106","978-0-87661-206-4","1676640","10.2307_3601962","10.2307_3601963"],"dc-date":["1961"],"Name":["Agora VI"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"dc-title":["Terracottas and Plastic Lamps of the Roman Period"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0037::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0037.jpg::104::150"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 6","Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Grandjouan, C."]},{"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 7","dc-creator":["Perlzweig, J."],"Type":"Publication","Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0038::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0038.jpg::104::150"],"dc-title":["Lamps of the Roman Period: First to Seventh Century after Christ"],"Name":["Agora VII"],"dc-date":["1961"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["Nearly 3,000 specimens of lamps of “Roman” character are catalogued in this volume that covers the period from the 1st century B.C. to the 8th century A.D. The lamps are not easy to classify because the appearance of the clay used is not an infallible guide to the place of manufacture and the molds used to create the shapes were used widely around the Mediterranean. Terracotta lamps were probably made for local consumption in most cities of Greece; only a few centers, notably Athens and Corinth, developed an export trade capable of competing with local manufacturers. Since lamps from Athens do appear at other sites, the presentation of a well-dated sample of these finds provides useful reference material for scholars working at other sites.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","7","ii-xiv+1-69+71-240","978-0-87661-207-1","720689","10.2307_3601966","10.2307_3601967"]},{"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"dc-date":["1962"],"Name":["Agora VIII"],"dc-description":["This volume reports on Athenian pottery found in the Athenian Agora up to 1960 that can dated from about the middle of the 8th century, when “the appearance of a painter of sufficient personal distinction to enliven the whole craft” marks a real break from the earlier Geometric style, through the third quarter of the 7th century when Protoattic gives way to black-figure and black wares. A sampling of contemporary imported ware is included. The material is treated first by shape and then, more extensively, by painting styles. Some 650 characteristic pieces are selected for cataloguing. The introduction discusses the development of the various shapes and styles, characterizing the special techniques and innovations of the period. The topographical features of the Agora that are indicated by the places of discovery of deposits of late Geometric and Protoattic pottery are summarized under wells, houses, workshops, sanctuaries, cemeteries, and roads.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","8","iii-v+vii-xi+xiii-xiv+1-134","978-0-87661-208-8","10.2307_3601968","10.2307_3601969"],"Collection":["Agora"],"Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Brann, E. T. H."],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 8","dc-title":["Late Geometric and Protoattic Pottery: Mid 8th to Late 7th Century B.C."],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0039::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0039.jpg::104::150"]},{"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["All but 9 of the 6,449 Islamic coins found at Athenian Agora up to the date when this book was written belong to the Ottoman period. The earliest datable Ottoman coin is from the reign of Mehmed I (1413-21). Most of the coins come from overseas mints such as those of Istanbul, Cairo, Macedonia, Serbia, and Bosnia. Although the name of Athens cannot be read on any coin, the author thinks that many of the crude coppers of the 15th to 16th centuries A.D. were locally struck.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","9","iii-viii+1-62","978-0-87661-209-5","608974","10.2307_3601964","10.2307_3601965"],"dc-date":["1962"],"Name":["Agora IX"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"dc-title":["The Islamic Coins"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0035::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0035.jpg::104::150"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 9","Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Miles, G. C."]},{"dc-description":["The first part of this book deals with weights (14 bronze, 109-111 lead, 28 stone) and measures (75 dry, 28-31 liquid). Although humble objects, the detailed study of these everyday items provides archaeological evidence for substantial changes in weight standards at different times in Athenian history. This reinforces literary evidence for a highly centralized bureaucracy controlling trade and commerce. In the second part of the book, Crosby catalogues and discusses some 900 lead and 46 clay tokens uncovered during the Agora excavations. The bulk of the lead material dates from the Roman period, while all the clay pieces belong to the 4th, 3rd, and 2nd centuries B.C. These tokens served diverse functions. Some were used as admission tickets for festivals and theater performances while others can be related to attendance at lawcourts or receipt of tax payments.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","10","iii-v+vii+ix-xii+1-69+71-146","978-0-87661-210-1","310501","10.2307_3601970","10.2307_3601971"],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Name":["Agora X"],"dc-date":["1964"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0040::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0040.jpg::200::267"],"dc-title":["Weights, Measures and Tokens"],"dc-creator":["Lang, M.","Crosby, M."],"Type":"Publication","Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 10"},{"dc-date":["1965"],"Name":["Agora XI"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["Over 170 catalogued pieces of sculpture from the Athenian Agora are divided into four sections: the genuinely Archaic in date and form, the “archaistic” imitating Archaic originals (late 5th century to early 4th century B.C.), and two restricted groups of sculpture common in Athens. The latter are the Hekataia (a triple Hekate figure) and the herms. The chronological range is thus from the earliest Archaic kouros (ca. 600 B.C.) through the herms and Hekataia of the Roman period. Among other questions, the author explores the nature of the archaizing movement and the different types of herms and how they were used in the Agora.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","11","iii-ix+xi-xix+1-192","978-0-87661-211-7","423878","10.2307_3601972","10.2307_3601973"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 11","Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Harrison, E. B."],"dc-title":["Archaic and Archaistic Sculpture"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0041::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0041.jpg::200::268"]},{"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0042::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0042.jpg::200::263"],"dc-title":["Black and Plain Pottery of the 6th, 5th and 4th Centuries B.C."],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 12","dc-creator":["Sparkes, B. A.","Tallcott, L."],"Type":"Publication","Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["This massive (two-part) volume focuses on pottery produced between 600 and 300 B.C. with Sparkes discussing the black glaze and Talcott the domestic (household and kitchen) wares of the period. Over 2,040 pieces of black-glaze pottery are catalogued and described, with many drawings and photographs.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","12","iii-v+vii-ix+383-419+421-472","978-0-87661-212-5","423902","10.2307_3601976","10.2307_3601977"],"Name":["Agora XII"],"dc-date":["1970"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"]},{"dc-title":["The Neolithic and Bronze Ages"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0043::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0043.jpg::379::500"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 13","dc-creator":["Immerwahr, S. A."],"Type":"Publication","Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["The finds in the Athenian Agora from the Neolithic and Bronze Ages have added important chronological context to the earliest eras of Athenian history. The bulk of the items are pottery, but stone, bone, and metal objects also occur. Selected material from the Neolithic and from the Early and Middle Helladic periods is catalogued by fabric and then shape and forms the basis of detailed discussions of the wares (by technique, shapes, and decoration), the stone and bone objects, and their relative and absolute chronology. The major part of the volume is devoted to the Mycenaean period, the bulk of it to the cemetery of forty-odd tombs and graves with detailed discussions of architectural forms; of funeral rites; of offerings of pottery, bronze, ivory, and jewelry; and of chronology. Pottery from wells, roads, and other deposits as well as individual vases without significant context, augment the pottery from tombs as the basis of a detailed analysis of Mycenaean pottery. A chapter on historical conclusions deals with all areas of Mycenaean Athens.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","13","ii-v+vii-ix+xi-xx+1-286","978-0-87661-213-2","10.2307_3601978","10.2307_3601979"],"Name":["Agora XIII"],"dc-date":["1971"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"]},{"Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Thompson, H. A.","Wycherley, R. E."],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 14","Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0044::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0044.jpg::200::257"],"dc-title":["The Agora of Athens: The History, Shape and Uses of an Ancient City Center"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"dc-date":["1972"],"Name":["Agora XIV"],"dc-description":["The subtitle, The History, Shape and Uses of an Ancient City Center, suggests the general character of this volume, which provides an overview of the area that served as the civic center of Athens from about 600 B.C. to A.D. 267. After a general resumé of the historical development of the Agora, the monuments are treated in detail, grouped by their use and purpose. Each monument is discussed in the light of both the literary and the archaeological evidence for its identification and its restoration. In the light of the topographical conclusions the route of Pausanias is traced. A chapter “After the Heruli” follows the fortunes of the area from A.D. 267 till the 19th century; the last century is treated in the detailed report of “The Excavations” up to 1971. This is a definitive survey of the historical and topographical results of 40 years of American excavations.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","14","ii-v+vii-xxiii+1-257","978-0-87661-214-9","10.2307_3601980","10.2307_3601981"],"Collection":["Agora"]},{"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0046::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0046.jpg::382::500"],"dc-title":["Inscriptions: The Athenian Councillors"],"dc-creator":["Meritt, B. D.","Traill, J."],"Type":"Publication","Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 15","dc-description":["This book presents 494 dedications made by, and honoring, members of the Athenian administrative assembly (prytaneis) between 408/7 B.C. and A.D. 231/2. The inscriptions are important because they enable scholars to reconstruct a more precise chronological framework for Hellenistic and later Athenian history while also increasing understanding of the political organization of Attica. With thousands of names from 700 years of administration listed, the dedications also provide a rich source for prosopographers.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","15","iii-vii+ix-xii+1-25+27-65+67-135+137+139-209+211+213-245+247+249-339+341-347+349-486","978-0-87661-215-6","10.2307_3601982","10.2307_3601983"],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Name":["Agora XV"],"dc-date":["1974"]},{"dc-creator":["Woodhead, A. G."],"Type":"Publication","Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 16","dc-title":["Inscriptions: The Decrees"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0047::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0047.jpg::200::268"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Name":["Agora XVI"],"dc-date":["1997"],"dc-description":["Edited texts, with extensive commentary, of some 344 fragments of Attic decrees dating from the mid-5th century B.C. to A.D. 203, found in excavations of the Athenian Agora before 1967, with brief notes on additional material found up to 1975. Well-documented discussions of individual archon years are supplied at the appropriate points in the chronological arrangement. In a field known for controversy, the author reviews the principal readings, restorations, and interpretations, achieving a balance between extreme positions.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","16","iii-v+vii-ix+xi-xiii+xv-xvii+1+3-37+39+41-163+165+167-353+355+357-463+465+467-487+489+491-503+505-527","978-0-87661-216-3","10.2307_3601984","10.2307_3601985"],"Collection":["Agora"]},{"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["This volume presents the funerary inscriptions found in the Athenian Agora between 1931 and 1968. In addition, all Agora fragments of the public casualty lists known in 1971 have been included, together with fragments associated with them but found elsewhere, although the latter are not discussed in full. Of the 1,099 inscriptions catalogued here, 238 are published for the first time. With the exception of 6 (previously published), all contain a sure name, ethnic, or demotic. In accordance with the established policy of the Excavations of the Athenian Agora, a photograph is included of every stone for which none has appeared previously. The catalogue is arranged alphabetically by demotics and ethnics; the indexes include names, tribes, geographical names, significant Greek words, and Latin words. The author’s unparalleled familiarity with Attic funerary scripts enabled him to offer valuable chronological suggestions for otherwise undatable private monuments and his historical understanding gave new meaning to the public funerary monuments.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","17","iii-v+vii+ix-xi+1-240","978-0-87661-217-0","10.2307_3601988","10.2307_3601989"],"dc-date":["1974"],"Name":["Agora XVII"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"dc-title":["Inscriptions: The Funerary Monuments"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0048::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0048.jpg::104::150"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 17","Type":"Publication","dc-creator":["Bradeen, D. W."]},{"dc-title":["Inscriptions: The Dedicatory Monuments"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0049::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0049.jpg::376::500"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 18","dc-creator":["Geagan, D."],"Type":"Publication","Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["This is the last of five volumes presenting inscriptions discovered in the Athenian Agora between 1931 and 1967. Published here are inscriptions on monuments commemorating events or victories, on statues or other representations erected to honor individuals and deities, and on votive offerings to divinities. Most are dated to between the 4th century B.C. and the 2nd century A.D., but a few survive from the Archaic and Late Roman periods. A final section contains monuments that are potentially, but not certainly, dedicatory in character, and a small number of grave markers omitted from Agora XVII. Each of the 773 catalogue entries includes a description of the object inscribed, bibliography, a transcription of the Greek text, and commentary. There are photographs of each piece of which no adequate illustration has yet been published, including newly joined fragments. The volume concludes with concordances, bibliography, and an index of persons named in the inscriptions.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","18","978-0-87661-218-7"],"Name":["Agora XVIII"],"dc-date":["2009"],"dc-publisher":["The American School of Classical Studies at Athens"]},{"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["The three types of inscription from the Athenian Agora presented in this volume are all concerned with important civic matters. Part I, by Gerald V. Lalonde, includes all the horoi found in the excavations; most of them had been brought into the area for reuse at a later period. An introductory essay discusses the various purposes the horoi served, whether as markers of actual boundaries or private records of security for debt. The various types are illustrated in photographs. In Part II Merle K. Langdon publishes all the known records of the Athenian poletai, a board of magistrates charged with letting contracts for public works, leasing the state-owned silver mines and the privilege of collecting taxes, and leasing or selling confiscated property. The catalogue is preceded by an account of the nature of these transactions and the history of the poletai. Part III, by Michael B. Walbank, presents the records of leases for public and sacred lands, which once stood in the Agora; the documents are now in both the Agora and the Epigraphical Museums in Athens. The discussion considers the history and the terms of the leases. The three sections are followed by combined concordances and indices, with photographs of all stones not previously published.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","19","iii-v+vii-ix+xi-xiii+1+3+5-51+53+55-143+145+147+149-207+209+211-245","978-0-87661-219-4","10.2307_3601986","10.2307_3601987"],"Name":["Agora XIX"],"dc-date":["1991"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0045::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0045.jpg::382::500"],"dc-title":["Inscriptions: Horoi, Poletai Records, Leases of Public Lands"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 19","dc-creator":["Lalonde, G.V.","Langdon, M. K.","Walbank, M. B."],"Type":"Publication"},{"Name":["Agora XX"],"dc-date":["1971"],"dc-publisher":["American School of Classical Studies at Athens"],"Collection":["Agora"],"dc-description":["The Church of the Holy Apostles stands at an important crossroads in the southeast corner of the area of the ancient Agora. The earliest church on the site, built over a wall of the 5th-century B.C. Mint and the foundations of the Roman Nymphaeum, is here dated to the last quarter of the 10th century on the basis of its plan and details. The original plan was revealed as a tetraconch cross-in-square with dome on pendentives carried on arches supported by four freestanding columns, the west of the four apses penetrating into the narthex. Fifteen tombs of this first period were excavated under the floor of the church proper and the narthex. In a second period, probably in the late 17th or early 18th century, repairs after damage from the 1687 fighting made changes in the narthex and dome and the interior was covered with paintings. War in 1826 again caused damage which was repaired in Period III with further changes and additions. Finally in 1876-1882 (Period IV) the west end was again rebuilt and the last vestiges of the west apse removed. The architectural type is studied in relation to other churches in Greece, and the restoration is described. The plates give the author’s photos of the structure before, during, and after restoration and drawings of elevations, sections, and plans.","The Athenian Agora: Results of Excavations Conducted by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","20","ii-v+vii+ix-xii+1-44","978-0-87661-220-0","10.2307_3601990","10.2307_3601991"],"Id":"Agora:Publication:Agora 20","dc-creator":["Frantz, M. A."],"Type":"Publication","Icon":["Agora:Image:2009.09.0050::/Agora/2009/2009.09/2009.09.0050.jpg::200::269"],"dc-title":["The Church of the Holy Apostles"]}]},"facet_counts":{"facet_queries":{},"facet_fields":{"Type":["Publication",2266,"Basket",0,"Card",0,"Coin",0,"Comment",0,"Conservation",0,"Deposit",0,"Drawing",0,"Image",0,"Lot",0,"Monument",0,"Notebook",0,"NotebookPage",0,"Object",0,"PublicationPage",0,"Report",0,"ReportPage",0,"Webpage",0]},"facet_ranges":{},"facet_intervals":{},"facet_heatmaps":{}}}