Abstracts - faqs.org

Abstracts

Anthropology/archeology/folklore

Search abstracts:
Abstracts » Anthropology/archeology/folklore

Greece sues for Mycenaean gold

Article Abstract:

Michael Ward of the Michael Ward Gallery, New York, New York, is being sued by the government of Greece for return of a collection of Mycenaean gold jewelry. The items in the collection, acquired from a European collector, have never before been published or publicly exhibited and were unknown to scholars. Some specialists believe the jewelry came from Aidonia in Greece and must have been illegally exported. However, Ward points out that many Mycenaean objects have been found outside Greece, and that the government did not respond to an earlier inquiry about the objects' provenance.

Author: Rose, Mark
Publisher: Archaeological Institute of America
Publication Name: Archaeology
Subject: Anthropology/archeology/folklore
ISSN: 0003-8113
Year: 1993
Cases, Antiquities, Mycenae (Ancient city), Gold jewelry

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Queen of the novel

Article Abstract:

Eminent scholar and best-selling author, Barbara Mertz has written many of the best selling mysteries featuring amateur sleuth Amelia Peabody, set in Egypt at the end of the nineteenth century and at the opening decades of the twentieth. She describes her career, current undertakings and the state of Egyptology.

Author: Rose, Mark
Publisher: Archaeological Institute of America
Publication Name: Archaeology
Subject: Anthropology/archeology/folklore
ISSN: 0003-8113
Year: 2005
Egypt, Interview, Novelists, Criticism and interpretation, Works, Best sellers, Art, Egyptian, Egyptian art, Mertz, Barbara

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Fallen heroes; Bones of Pericles' soldiers come to New York for analysis

Article Abstract:

Excavations conducted in 1997 in downtown Athens which found bones of as many as 250 people now at a forensic laboratory of New York's Adelphi University are described. The initial dating of the pottery found there suggests 430 BC, the beginning of the Peloponnesian War.

Author: Rose, Mark
Publisher: Archaeological Institute of America
Publication Name: Archaeology
Subject: Anthropology/archeology/folklore
ISSN: 0003-8113
Year: 2000
Classical antiquities, Tombs

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Subjects list: Greece
Similar abstracts:
  • Abstracts: Mongolia: Seeking clues to ancient nomadic life at the edge of the Arctic. Searching for the first New Zealanders: can rats rewrite Pacific history?
  • Abstracts: Joseph Wegner:Associate curator, Egyptian section. Out of heaviness, enlightenment. The centennial potlatch
  • Abstracts: Surrogate stone. Summer on the River Styx. What killed the babies of Lugnano?
  • Abstracts: Is the mask a hoax? The case for authenticity. Behind the mask of Agamemnon: is Schliemann's famous find a modern-day forgery?
  • Abstracts: Insistent questions: a simple test could resolve the matter
This website is not affiliated with document authors or copyright owners. This page is provided for informational purposes only. Unintentional errors are possible.
Some parts © 2025 Advameg, Inc.