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| Bronze pin with long, thin shaft, circular in section, tapering slightly to a blunt point. Upper part of shaft and pear-shaped head twisted into a spiral. Bronze Complete or intact. Intact; shaft corroded ... 4th century |
| Bronze implement made of a flat strip of metal, tapering to a blunt point at one end and wider at the other, where it is pierced with a large circular hole. May have been used in connection with a lamp, ... Byzantine or later |
Bronze balance beam made of a thin bronze rod (Max. Diam. 0.002) with central projection with hole pierced through it serving as balance indicator. End of each arm of the balance beam before where suspension ... 1935/05/04 |
Conical bronze bell with flat resting surface. Crown pierced by oval suspension hole. Rows of incised lines. Bronze. Complete profile. Profile preserved. Clapper missing. Some damage along lip ... 13th c. based on coins in context (NB 135, p. 113, 116) |
| Bronze ear spoon with shaft made of a flattened strip of metal, slightly rounded on the back, tapering to a blunt point at one end and narrowing from W. 0.005 to W. 0.003 for 0.018 m before the bowl at ... Roman |
| Bronze fork originally recorded as having bone handle; bone part of handle now missing. Bronze part of handle made of flattened strip of metal with short projection on one side of end of handle. Remains ... Post-Byzantine? |
| Half-lifesized grotesque mask with pierced eyes, puffy cheeks, bulbous nose, mustache parted at the center, and open mouth. Nostrils unmarked and unpierced. Gray slip. Hard grayish-pink clay with rare ... 1933/06/09 |
| Moulded miniature mask with wide eyes (pierced), furrowed brow, large wrinkled nose. Nostrils incised but not pierced through. Mouth wide open. White slip with red details around eyes and nose. Hard pinkish-brown ... based on Corinth 12 |
| Along front and back of room: diamond pattern with center cross framed by quadruple bands of white, red, and blue tesserae. Along sides, broken pieces of marble in "crazy-quilt" pattern, marble of different ... 1st c. in publication, more likely 2nd half 2nd to early 3rd c. |
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