[Deposit] H-I 7-8:1: "Burnt Layer"

Accumulated debris on the west side of the market square. Related layers added 1999/2000 (JWH), e.g. "Gravelly layer above burning", "Clearing Classical floor", "Lowest level above bedrock", "Below burning", ... First half of 5th c. A.D.

icon

[Monument] Stoa of Zeus

Civic, Religious Unknown Pentelic Marble, Limestone Poor, foundations and fragments of superstructure ... 450-400 B.C.

icon

[Object] A 4546: Revetment Fragment with Menorah

Right and left edges only preserved. Other edges broken. The menorah and a palm branch are deeply incised on a thin piece of revetment; apparently placed symmetrically on thin strip of revetment. The right ... 8 May 1933

icon

[Object] S 257: Herm Head Fragment

Fragment from proper right side of a very large head with beard and corkscrew curls. Preserved is part of the side of the neck, and of the face with the right eye and beard, the fillet round the front ... Roman period.

icon

[Object] S 1892: Hekataion Fragment

Head and lower legs broken off. Three female figures back to back with arms and skirts touching at sides. Feet together, both arms lowered. Peplos girded at waist worn over chiton with buttoned sleeves ... 1st c. A.D.

icon

[Object] SS 1447: Stamped Amphora Handle: Knidian

Small fragment. Light color of clay. Impression broken and chipped away to right, incomplete above, left. Cf. Dumont (1872), pp. 257, 258, nos. 66, 72. Par: Dumont 1871, p257, nr 66 and p258, nr 72* ... Late Roman

icon

[Object] S 767: Draped Standing Female Figure from Relief

Head, right arm, lower left arm, and legs below knees missing. Upper body battered. The figure wears a Doric chitin with kelps. She is standing, the weight is on the left leg, the right knee bent. Traces ... 28 January 1936

icon

[Object] S 768: Draped Standing Female Figure from Relief

Preserved from waist to above ankles. The figure wears a Doric chitin with long overfilled; standing with the weight on the right leg, the left leg bent. Broken at sides; back rough-picked. Pentelic marble ... 28 January 1936