"The Peacock and the Basket, the Marble and the Brick. Architectural ornaments and their materiality in a transcultural perspective. Constantinople to Bukhara (6th to 10th century)". Prof. Dr. Gerhard Wolf Director, Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz - Max-Planck-Institut
Read MoreDr. Ulrike Muss, University of Vienna
Read MoreThe week-long course entitled Field School on Archaeological Science in Ancient Corinth is offered by the Malcolm H. Wiener Laboratory for Archaeological Science (ASCSA), in collaboration with the Kimmel Center for Archaeological Science, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, and the ASCSA Excavations at Ancient Corinth.
Read MoreCorinth Excavations updates you about our current conservation progress on the mosaic as well as its appearance at conferences around the world.
Read MoreProf. Jenifer Neils, Case-Western University
Read MoreProfessor Robert Koehl and a small group of graduate students from Hunter College visited the facilities of the School yesterday.
Read MoreThe ASCSA newsletter is now online.
Read MoreThe Blegen added new special projects and new staff and interns in 2015.
Read MoreBridge of the Untiring Sea: The Corinthian Isthmus from Prehistory to Late Antiquity (Hesperia Suppl. 48), edited by Elizabeth Gebhard and Timothy Gregory, is now published and available for purchase.
Read MoreThis Dialectic of Blood and Light. George Seferis - Philip Sherrard. An Exchange: 1947-1971. Edited by Denise Sherrard. Limni, Evia: 2015
Read MoreIn this new feature we focus on select items in the School's vast holdings. Corinth Excavation Assistant Director Ioulia Tzonou-Herbst picks this diminutive but remarkable item from the Corinth collection.
Read MorePhilanthropy and volunteerism have played huge roles in the ASCSA's past. This article provides historical context to — as well as continues — the article found in the winter 2016 issue of the newsletter which details current refugee aid initiatives at the School.
Read MoreThe School speaks with recent MacArthur "genius grant" winner Dimitri Nakassis about what the fellowship means to him and his research into Mycenaean society.
Read MoreThe School's Assistant Director Dylan Rogers talks about his interest in Roman fountains, the pull of the School community. . . and his love of the bow tie.
Read MoreThe Agora's IT specialist, Bruce Hartzler, talks to ASCSA about the development of the iDig app and how it's bringing the process of excavation into real-time, shareable reporting
Read MoreCheck the online version of "Γιορτινές σελίδες από τα αρχεία της Γενναδείου" featuring manuscripts from the personal papers of novelists Elias Venezis, Stratis Myrivilis, Vassilis Vassilikos, poets Goerge Seferis and Kostas Varnalis, and others. A feast to the eyes!
Read MoreThe Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore: The Greek Lamps and Offering Trays (Corinth XVIII.7) by Nancy Bookidis and Elizabeth G. Pemberton is now published and available for sale.
Read MoreThe Politics of Consumption in an Archaic Cretan City Prof. Donald Haggis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Read MoreΕπίτιμος διδάκτορας του πανεπιστημίου Αθηνών ο Βασίλης Βασιλικός
Read MoreIn 1859 Schliemann traveled to Spain. Schliemann's personal diary records his visit to La Granja de San Ildefonso, as well as his unsuccessful efforts to visit the royal family of Spain at their summer residence.
Read MoreΒιβλίων Τόποι Visits the Archives of the Gennadius Library
Read MoreΒλέμματα εκ του μακρόθεν: Άγιον Όρος και γυναίκες της Δύσεως,1880-1980 Veronica della Dora, Chair of Human Geography, Royal Holloway, University of London
Read MoreProf. Yannis Lolos (Department of History, Archaeology and Social Anthropology, University of Thessaly)
Read MoreTopics in this issue include the imagery on Tanagran larnakes, social networks and Athenian democracy, a Panathenaic victor list, Pausanias and the Archaic Agora, and the mosque/church within the Pylos Fortress.
Read MoreThe intact shaft tomb of a wealthy, Bronze Age warrior buried solo ca.1500 B.C. was discovered by a team led by former School Director Jack Davis and his wife Shari Stocker. The burial contains one of the most significant displays of prehistoric era riches discovered in mainland Greece in the past 65 years.
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