- Kotroni
Attica - Athens - Kotroni. Anastasia Dakouri-Hild (University of Virginia) and Stephen Davies (University College Dublin) report on the final season of the Kotroni Archaeological Survey Project (KASP), under the supervision of the Ephorate of Antiquities of East Attica and the IIHSA. In 2023, the project completed its programme of geophysical prospection: first, in the area of the tumulus excavated in 1894, to explore whether nearby knolls could conceal additional...
Kotroni - Kotroni Archaeological Survey Project (KASP). Anastasia Dakouri-Hild (University of Virginia) and Stephen Davies (University College Dublin) under the auspices of the Greek Ministry of Culture (Ephorate of Antiquities of East Attica) and the Irish Institute for Hellenic Studies at Athens (IIHSA), report on the Kotroni Archaeological Survey Project. In 2022 the KASP study season commenced, involving the sorting and quantifying of pottery, the illustration of...
Kotroni - Kotroni Archaeological Survey Project (KASP). Eleni Andrikou et al. (Ephorate of Antiquities of East Attica), Anastasia Dakouri-Hild (University of Virginia) and Stephen Davis (University College Dublin) report on the second season of fieldwork for the Kotroni Archaeological Survey Project. Intensive pedestrian survey During the intensive pedestrian survey in the summer of 2021, several new archaeological sites in the extended area of the citadel were identified, including...
Kotroni, Kotroni Archaeological Survey Project (KASP). Eleni Andrikou et al. (Ephorate of Antiquities of East Attica), Anastasia Dakouri-Hild (University of Virginia) and Stephen Davis (University College Dublin) report on the first season of fieldwork for the Kotroni Archaeological Survey Project.
This is an interdisciplinary project which aims at systematizing piecemeal information and increasing the archaeological record about the Aphidnian landscape. This area encompasses and...
Au lieu-dit Pyrgos la fouille a mis au jour, dans deux terrains situés à proximité de la tour rectangulaire, les fondations de constructions byzantines qui, comme la tour, ont réutilisé des blocs de périboles funéraires du IVe siècle av. J.-C. Ibid*., p. 56. *ArchDelt 33 (1978)...