"Icon","dc-date","dc-description","Redirect","dc-subject","Chronology","Type","dc-publisher","UserLevel","Collection","Name","Id","dc-title","dc-creator" "","October","American Journal of Archaeology","","","","Publication","","","Corinth","Askew, American Journal of Archaeolog35:4... 1931","Corinth:Publication:Askew, American Journal of Archaeolog35:4... 1931","A Portrait of Caracalla in Corinth","Askew, Ess" "","November","9783110254013","","","","Publication","Walter de Gruyter","","Corinth","Athanassaki & Bowie, Archaic and Classical Choral Song: ... 2011","Corinth:Publication:Athanassaki amp Bowie, Archaic and Classical Choral Song: ... 2011","Archaic and Classical Choral Song: Performance, Politics and Dissemination","Athanassaki, Lucia & Bowie, Ewen" "","June","International Journal of Historical Archaeology","","","","Publication","","","Corinth","Athanassopoulos, International Journal of Historical 14:2... 2010","Corinth:Publication:Athanassopoulos, International Journal of Historical 14:2... 2010","Landscape Archaeology and the Medieval Countryside: Settlement and Abandonment in the Nemea Region","Athanassopoulos, Effie" "","1982","Ceramic production and exchange in Early Bronze Age Greece have been studied through provenance determination by neutron activation analysis. The concentrations of Na, K, Rb, Cs, Ca, Al, Sc, La, Ce, Eu, Yb, Th, Ti, Hf, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, and Co were determined, with respect to Perlman-Asaro standard pottery, in 255 objects of the Early Helladic (or EH) II and III periods found at Keramidhaki, Korakou, Phlious, Zygouries, Tiryns, and Asine in Korinthia and Argolis. Multivariate treatment of these data, merged with 162 analyses from the author's earlier work with samples from Lerna (Argolis) and Lake Vouliagmeni (Korinthia), yielded 11 compositional reference groups. Many of these could be attributed to centres of production on distributional or other grounds, thereby allowing the sources of more than half the sampled objects to be determined. The following conclusions were reached: All 8 sites (except possibly Phlious) were sources of common EH II ware (sauceboats and small bowls), which had limited distributions. Many unusual EH II fine wares had other sources and broader distributions. The attribution of coarse wares was complicated by the presence of tempering material. The changes in pottery acquisition patterns which accompanied the beginning of EH III were probably more drastic at Tiryns than at Lerna or Korakou.","","","","Publication","","","Corinth","Attas, Regional ceramic trade in Early ... 1982","Corinth:Publication:Attas, Regional ceramic trade in Early ... 1982","Regional ceramic trade in Early Bronze Age Greece : evidence from neutron activation analysis of early Helladic pottery from Argolis and Korinthia","Attas, Michael" "","April","Journal of Field Archaeology","","","","Publication","","","Corinth","Attas, et al. Journal of Field Archaeology 14:1, 1987","Corinth:Publication:Attas, et al. Journal of Field Archaeology 14:1, 1987","An Archaeometric Study of Early Bronze Age Pottery Production and Exchange in Argolis and Korinthia (Corinthia), Greece","Attas, Michael; Fossey, John M. & Yaffe, Leo" "","1988","31-45","","","","Publication","Publications de la Sorbonne","","Corinth","Avramea & Kyrkou, Inventaire topographique de Corinthe ... 1988","Corinth:Publication:Avramea amp Kyrkou, Inventaire topographique de Corinthe ... 1988","Inventaire topographique de Corinthe et sa region a l'epoque chretienne et byzantine","Avramea, A & Kyrkou, M." "","1997","","","","","Publication","","","Corinth","Avramea, Le Peloponnese Du IVe Au VIIIe ... 1997","Corinth:Publication:Avramea, Le Peloponnese Du IVe Au VIIIe ... 1997","Le Peloponnese Du IVe Au VIIIe Siecle: Changements Et Persistances","Avramea, A." "","November","American Journal of Archaeology","","","","Publication","","","Corinth","Babbitt, American Journal of Archaeolog1:6... 1897","Corinth:Publication:Babbitt, American Journal of Archaeolog1:6... 1897","The Theatre at Corinth: A Report of the Excavations of 1896","Babbitt, Frank Cole"