Federal Register - November 22, 2021
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 222 / Monday, November 22, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
both launching weapons spears and javelins and weapons for hand-to-hand combat swords, daggers, etc.. Armor includes body armor, such as helmets, cuirasses, shin guards, and shields, and horse armor often decorated with elaborate engraved, embossed, or perforated designs. Approximate date:
6th millennium B.C. to 30 B.C.
6. Seals and TokensIn lead, tin, copper, bronze, silver, and gold. Types include rings, amulets, and seals with shank. Approximate date: 4th millennium B.C. to 15th century A.D.
7. CoinsMany of the mints of the listed coins can be found in B.V. Head, Historia Numorum: A Manual of Greek Numismatics London, 1911 and C.M.
Kraay, Archaic and Classical Greek Coins London, 1976. Many of the Roman provincial mints in Greece are listed in A. Burnett et al., Roman Provincial Coinage I: From the Death of Caesar to the Death of Vitellius 44 BC
AD 69 London, 1992 and id., Roman Provincial Coinage II: From Vespasian to Domitian AD 6996 London, 1999.
a. Greek Bronze CoinsStruck by city-states, leagues, and kingdoms that operated in the territory of the modern Greek state including the ancient territories of the Peloponnese, Central Greece, Thessaly, Epirus, Crete and those parts of the territories of ancient Macedonia, Thrace and the Aegean islands that lay within the boundaries of the modern Greek state. Approximate date: 5th century B.C. to late 1st century B.C.
b. Greek Silver CoinsThis category includes the small denomination coins of the city-states of Aegina, Athens, and Corinth, and the Kingdom of Macedonia under Philip II and Alexander the Great.
Such coins weigh less than approximately 10 grams and are known as obols, diobols, triobols, hemidrachms, and drachms. Also included are all denominations of coins struck by the other city-states, leagues, and kingdoms that operated in the territory of the modern Greek state including the ancient territories of the Peloponnese, Central Greece, Thessaly, Epirus, Crete, and those parts of the territories of ancient Macedonia, Thrace and the Aegean islands that lie within the boundaries of the modern Greek state. Approximate date: 6th century B.C. to late 1st century B.C.
c. Roman Coins Struck in GreeceIn silver and bronze, struck at Roman and Roman provincial mints that operated in the territory of the modern Greek state including the ancient territories of the Peloponnese, Central Greece, Thessaly, Epirus, Crete, and those parts of the territories of ancient Macedonia, Thrace and the Aegean islands that lie within
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the boundaries of the modern Greek state. Approximate date: late 2nd century B.C. to 3rd century A.D.
d. Coins from the Byzantine and Medieval Periods This category includes coin types such as those of the Byzantine and medieval Frankish and Venetian states that circulated primarily in Greece, ranging in date from approximately the 3rd century A.D. to the 15th century A.D.
C. Ceramic 1. Sculpture a. Architectural ElementsBaked clay terracotta elements used to decorate buildings. Elements include acroteria, antefixes, painted and relief plaques, metopes, cornices, roof tiles, revetments, and brick. Approximate date: 3rd millennium B.C. to 30 B.C.
b. Large StatuarySubject matter includes human and animal figures and groups of figures in the round. Common types are large-scale, free-standing statuary from approximately 1 m to 2.5
m in height and life-size busts head and shoulders of an individual.
Approximate date: 3rd millennium B.C.
to 30 B.C.
c. Small StatuarySubject matter is varied and includes human and animal figures, human body parts, groups of figures in the round, shrines, houses, and chariots. Includes Mycenaean and later Tanagra figurines. These range from approximately 10 cm to 1 m in height. Approximate date: 7th millennium B.C. to A.D. 324.
d. SarcophagiBlockor tub-shaped chests, often painted, known as larnax plural, larnakes. Approximate date:
3rd millennium B.C. to 30 B.C.
2. Vessels a. Neolithic PotteryHandmade, often decorated with a lustrous burnish, decorated with applique and/or incision, sometimes with added paint.
These come in a variety of shapes from simple bowls and vases with three or four legs to handled scoops and large storage jars. Approximate date: 7th millennium B.C. to 3rd millennium B.C.
b. Minoan, Cycladic, and Mycenaean PotteryHandmade and wheelmade pottery in shapes for tableware, serving, storing, and processing, with lustrous burnished, matte, applique, incised, and painted decoration; includes local styles such as Kamares ware, Pictorial Style, and extraordinary shapes such as frying pans and kernoi.
Approximate dates: 4th millennium B.C.
to 12th century B.C.
c. Submycenean and Pottery of the Geometric Period including subGeometric Handmade and wheelmade pottery that succeeds the styles of the Late Bronze Age and is
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produced in decorated and undecorated styles, often reflecting that of the Late Bronze Age but predominately using compasses for circles and linear geometric decoration, as well as schematic representations of humans, animals and birds. This category also includes Proto-Attic Black and White style pottery. Approximate dates: 12th century B.C. to 7th century B.C.
d. Attic Black Glaze, Black Figure, Red Figure and White Ground Pottery These are made in a specific set of shapes e.g., amphorae, kraters, hydriae, oinochoi, kylikes decorated with black painted figures on a clear clay ground Black Figure, decorative elements in reserve with background fired black Red Figure, and multi-colored figures painted on a white ground White Ground. Approximate date: 6th century B.C. to 4th century B.C.
e. Corinthian PotteryPainted pottery made in Corinth in a specific range of shapes for perfume and unguents and for drinking or pouring liquids. The very characteristic painted and incised designs depict human and animal figural scenes, rows of animals, and floral decoration. Approximate date: 8th century B.C. to 6th century B.C.
f. West Slope WareThis ware is named after a type of pottery from the west slope of the Athenian Acropolis. It has a black-glaze with relief and polychrome decoration and was produced first in Athens in the fourth century B.C., but the style is also manufactured elsewhere, such as at Corinth, Macedonia and Crete down to the first century B.C. Approximate date:
4th century B.C. to 1st century B.C.
g. Moldmade BowlsThese bowls with relief decoration were developed in Athens in the late third century B.C.
and soon manufactured elsewhere, such as in Corinth and Argos. Patterns include pine-cone scales, leaves, petals, or figural scenes. They have black glaze, often with a metallic sheen.
Approximate date: 3rd century B.C. to 1st century B.C.
h. Utilitarian WareIncludes undecorated plates, cooking pots, water jars plain and incised, plain perfume jars unguentaria, and transport amphorae often with stamped handles.
Approximate date: 6th century B.C. to A.D. 324.
i. Byzantine PotteryIncludes undecorated plain wares, utilitarian, tableware, serving and storage jars, special shapes such as pilgrim flasks, and can be matte painted or glazed, including incised sgraffitto and stamped with elaborate polychrome decorations using floral, geometric, human, and animal motifs; it is generally locally manufactured, though
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