The pottery of Lerna IV / by Jeremy B. Rutter ; foreword by Martha H. Wiencke ; introduction by Elizabeth C. Banks ; and contributions by M. Attas, P.P. Betancourt, R.G.V. Hancock, R.E. Jones, G.H. Myer, and S.J. Vaughan.
Material type: TextSeries: Lerna (Series) ; volume 3.Publisher: Princeton, New Jersey : American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1995Description: xxxv, 780 pages, v, 125, 21 pages of plates (2 folded) : illustrations, maps ; 31 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 0876612265; 9780876612262; 0876613032; 9780876613030Subject(s): Excavations (Archaeology) -- Greece -- Lerni | Pottery, Prehistoric -- Greece -- Lerni | Antiquities | Excavations (Archaeology) | Pottery, Prehistoric | Lerni (Greece) -- Antiquities | Argolis Peninsula (Greece) -- Antiquities | Greece -- Argolis Peninsula | Greece -- LerniDDC classification: 938.8 LOC classification: GN778.22.G8 | R87 1995Also available online.Summary: "The author presents the Early Helladic III pottery from Lerna in all its aspects, cataloguing, describing, and classifying over 1,400 vessels. The classification systems are based on detailed analyses of vessel shapes and ornamentation, supported by shape and pattern charts and numerous tables and illustrations. The concluding chapter compares the Lernaean pottery sequences to contemporary developments in central and southern Greece and examines the lineage of Early Helladic III pottery, which differs so profoundly from the pottery of the preceding period. Physico-chemical analyses of ceramic material are presented in an appendix"--Publisher's descriptionItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | The BIAA David H. French Library Shelf 32 - Main Room | E7b LERNA 17303 | Not for loan | BOOKS*00000001847 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages xxvii-xxxv) and indexes.
"The author presents the Early Helladic III pottery from Lerna in all its aspects, cataloguing, describing, and classifying over 1,400 vessels. The classification systems are based on detailed analyses of vessel shapes and ornamentation, supported by shape and pattern charts and numerous tables and illustrations. The concluding chapter compares the Lernaean pottery sequences to contemporary developments in central and southern Greece and examines the lineage of Early Helladic III pottery, which differs so profoundly from the pottery of the preceding period. Physico-chemical analyses of ceramic material are presented in an appendix"--Publisher's description
Also available online.