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Before the creation of the Agora as a civic center in the 7th
century B.C., the region northwest of the Acropolis was a vast
cemetery. Over 150 ancient burial places have been found by
excavators, and a few of the more remarkable are described here.
These range from a wealthy Mycenaean chamber tomb, filled with the
vases and jewelry of a rich noblewoman, to the poignant pithos
burial of an infant from around 725 B.C., accompanied by eight tiny
vases. As well as describing the assemblages found, the author
discusses the symbolism of funeral rites and the information about
social status and identity that burials reveal.
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