Bernhard F. Steinmann, Rainer Altherr & Alexander Varychev Athenische Mitteilungen 127/128 (2012/2013) [2015]: 1-46
The return of Early Cycladic objects from the collection of the Badisches Landesmuseum of Karlsruhe resulted from the acknowledgment that the museum’s problematic former acquisitions policy needed to be revisited.
Maria AnastasiadouAmerican Journal of Archaeology 120.2 (April 2016): 159-193
A boundary between eastern and central Crete has been proposed for the Protopalatial period on the basis of the distribution of various types of material culture, most notably pottery.
Josephine Verduci & Brent DavisThe Annual of the British School at Athens 110 (2015): 51-70
In this paper, we re-examine inscribed items of Minoan jewellery in the light of the increasing number of studies on ancient eastern Mediterranean jewellery and its meanings.
Stefanie A. H. Kennell Mitteleilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts. Athenische Mitteilungen 125 (2010) [2013]: 257-308
Previous studies of the relationship between Wilhelm Dörpfeld and Heinrich Schliemann, as well as the influence each exerted upon the other, have been based largely on the editions of Ernst Meyer (Briefwechsel II has only seven letters by Dörpfeld and eight from Schliemann), remarks contained in the Herrmann - Maaß edition of the Schliemann -Virchow correspondence, and some letters by Dörpfeld to his father-in-law Friedrich Adler (Archives, DAI Berlin).
Wolf-Dietrich Niemeier & Yannis ManiatisMitteleilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts. Athenische Mitteilungen 125 (2010) [2013]: 99-117
In 2009, the so-called Sacred Tree at the Samian Heraion - a cult tree marking the Bronze Age origin of the sanctuary according to Η. Walter, a tree grown fortuitously in Archaic times according to H. Kienast - was excavated for a third time.
Geoffrey Ludvik, Mark J. Kenoyer, Magda Pieniążek & William Aylward Anatolian Studies 65 (2015): 1-18
Stone beads from the site of Troy, Turkey, have been studied in order to understand better the nature of lapidary technology and trade during the third to second millennium BC in this part of Anatolia.
Georg Herdt The Annual of the British School at Athens 110 (2015): 203-212
The building at Toumba, Lefkandi, stands unique in its time and place. The remains of this monument are significant in terms of size and elaboration, and also on account of the way it has been reconstructed and interpreted as the ancestor of the Greek peripteral temple.
Nathan T. Arrington, Domna Terzopoulou, Marina Tasaklaki, Mark L. Lawall, Demetrios J. Brellas & Chantel E. White
Hesperia
85.1 (January-March 2016): 1-64
The Molyvoti, Thrace, Archaeological Project (MTAP) investigates the settlement inconclusively identified as ancient Stryme in its evolving regional, political, economic, and cultural contexts.