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Coins, for reasons that do not always make sense, are often treated
by field excavators as more reliable chronological indexes than
other classes of artifacts. This always makes their discovery a
welcome event, especially when they are silver or gold, which tend
to survive in the ground in a more recognizable state than their
bronze counterparts. The Red Figure pottery does not have quite the
same chronological relevance as the coins but does on occasion
contribute to the dating of archaeological contexts. Its often high
quality and interesting variety of shapes has already generated
commentary elsewhere in addition to what is presented here.
University Museum Monograph, 97
In 1971, in the southwestern area of the Roman Forum of Corinth, a
round-bottomed drainage channel was discovered filled with the
largest deposit of pottery of the 4th century ever found in the
city, as well as some coins, terracotta figurines, and metal and
stone objects. This volume publishes the pottery and metal and
stone objects, and includes a re-examination of the coins by
Orestes Zervos. Some of the cooking ware has been subjected to
neu-tron activation analysis, and a statistical analysis of all
recovered pottery has been completed. The contents of Drain 1971-1
are important for the function of the Classical buildings in this
part of Corinth, especially Buildings I and II, and for the
chronology of the renovation program that included the construction
of the South Stoa, which was probably not built before the last
decade of the 4th century.
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