This article presents a previously unpublished document relief discovered during excavations on the north slope of the Acropolis of Athens in 1937. Although fragmentary, this relief contributes to the corpus of 4th-century B.C. document reliefs by providing a well-preserved depiction of what is most likely “Demos,” the personification of the Athenian people, awarding a crown to a mortal man. The iconography of Demos is reviewed and an appendix presents a list and concordance of all extant representations of Demos on Attic document reliefs
The approximately 400 inscribed stone dedications published by A. E. Raubitschek in Dedications from...
This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis ...
In this dissertation Athenian inscriptions, granted during the fifth and fourth centuries down to th...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis ...
From the sixth century BCE, the Athenian Acropolis was a place for the display of public inscription...
The approximately 400 inscribed stone dedications published by A. E. Raubitschek in Dedications from...
This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis ...
In this dissertation Athenian inscriptions, granted during the fifth and fourth centuries down to th...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
International audienceOur understanding of ancient imagery is not immediate, so identifying certain ...
This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis ...
From the sixth century BCE, the Athenian Acropolis was a place for the display of public inscription...
The approximately 400 inscribed stone dedications published by A. E. Raubitschek in Dedications from...
This paper discusses two important inscriptions for the history of the Athenian Empire, the Chalkis ...
In this dissertation Athenian inscriptions, granted during the fifth and fourth centuries down to th...