PNYX第三期的日期

IF 0.8 1区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
HESPERIA Pub Date : 1996-07-01 DOI:10.2307/148378
S. Rotroff, J. Camp
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引用次数: 8

摘要

1930年12月8日,霍默·汤普森开始对古代雅典的尼克斯进行新的考古调查。集会场所内的挖掘工作将一直持续到次年6月13日,由汤普森监督,康斯坦丁诺斯·库鲁尼奥特斯(Konstantinos Kourouniotes)赞助并提供建议。康斯坦丁诺斯·库鲁尼奥特斯当时是希腊考古服务局局长,他在20世纪初曾在现场挖过测试壕。尽管在随后的几年里对山上进行了进一步的挖掘,但在组装地点内做的唯一额外工作是保护墙壁和重新分配填充物,以提供纪念碑原始外观的更生动的画面。汤普森六个月的工作,在一年后的《赫斯佩里亚》的第一篇文章中有详细的分析和报告,构成了现代雅典议会会议地点概念的基础。Kourouniotes和Thompson为集会场所的三个不同时期提供了证据:最初的阶段,按照剧院的正常方式安排,座位在山的自然斜坡上;随后的两个阶段结构的方向被颠倒了。铭文和文献证据表明,第一阶段在5世纪上半叶,第二阶段的建设可以追溯到5世纪末,根据从相关填充物中回收的陶器然而,最后一个阶段的年表已被证明是一个棘手的问题。这里的主要证据也是用来提高礼堂高度的填充物中的陶器;但这些陶器所讲述的故事一点也不简单。挖土机在礼堂里挖掘的几乎每个地方都遇到了第三时期的填充物。他们从战壕中挖出了大约150个装着陶器的篮子,其中大部分可以追溯到公元前4世纪,但其中有相当一部分——12个篮子(8%)——是罗马人的,在发现的600盏灯中,罗马灯约占80盏(13%)。他们注意到,罗马材料集中在保留填充物的巨石墙后面的区域,在他们的战壕A、C和D的北端(图1),但它的位置,在地表以下深处,有时躺在基岩上,使他们相信它不是侵入性的,因此他们得出结论,纪念碑的第三阶段是罗马时期的。对这一结论的进一步支持来自于对雅典巨石挡土墙和罗马砖石的比较
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Date of the Third Period of the PNYX
Q~, N December 8 of 1930, Homer Thompson began a new archaeological investigation of the ancient Athenian Pnyx. Excavation within the assembly place proper would continue until June 13 of the following year, supervised by Thompson and sponsored and advised by Konstantinos Kourouniotes, then Director of the Greek Archaeological Service, who had sunk test trenches into the site earlier in the century. Although subsequent years saw further excavation on the hill, the only additional work done within the assembly place was conservation of walls and redistribution of fill to provide a more vivid picture of the monument's original appearance. Thompson's six months of work, analyzed and reported in detail in the first number of Hesperia year later,1 form the basis for the modern conception of the meeting place of the Athenian Assembly. Kourouniotes and Thompson presented evidence for three distinct periods of the assembly place: the original phase, arranged in the normal manner of a theater, with the seating on the natural slope of the hill; and two subsequent phases in which the orientation of the structure had been reversed. Epigraphical and literary evidence place the first phase in the first half of the 5th century, and construction of the second phase can be dated near the end of the 5th century on the basis of pottery recovered from the associated fill.2 The chronology of the last phase, however, has proven a thorny problem. Here, too, the primary evidence is pottery from the fill that was brought in to raise the level of the auditorium; but the story told by that pottery is anything but straightforward. The excavators encountered the fill of Period III almost everywhere they dug within the auditorium. They extracted about 150 baskets of pottery from their trenches, most of it dating within the 4th century B.C. But a fairly substantial minority of the material12 baskets (8%)-was Roman, and Roman lamps accounted for about 80 (13%) of the 600 lamps found. They noted that Roman material was concentrated in the area behind the megalithic wall that retained the fill, at the northern ends of their trenches A, C, and D (Fig. 1), but its position, deep below the surface and sometimes lying on the bedrock itself, persuaded them that it was not intrusive, and they therefore concluded that the third phase of the monument was of Roman date. Additional support for this conclusion came from comparisons between the megalithic retaining wall and Roman masonry in Athens, and
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HESPERIA
HESPERIA ARCHAEOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.60
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25.00%
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