Azoria Project Archive
Creators: Donald C. Haggis, Azoria Project staff
The Azoria Project Archive is a collection of original documents and publications generated from fieldwork and research of the Azoria Project, an excavation of the Department of Classics and the Research Laboratories of Archaeology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Azoria is an Early Iron Age and Archaic site in eastern Crete, originally explored by Harriet Boyd Hawes for the American School of Classical Studies at Athens in 1900. Subsequent work at the site (the Azoria Project) has been conducted annually since 2001, including phases of topographical survey (2001); excavation (2002-2006); site conservation (2003-2008); and study and publication (2007-2012). The documents in this collection comprise an archive of original field notes, excavation notebooks, stratigraphic sections, manuscript drafts, artifact catalogs, and illustrations (plans, drawings, maps, and photographs) produced by this research project.
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And see also
Overview
The Azoria Project Overview (Research Design)
Azoria Project Bibliography
Summary Field Reports
2002 Summary Report 2003 Summary Report2004 Summary Report
2005 Summary Report2006 Summary Report2013 Summary Report
2013 Summary Report (in Greek)
2013 Summary Report (zooarchaeology)
Detailed Field Reports and Articles
2002 Detailed Report
2003-2004 Detailed Report Part 1 (Archaic Buildings)2003-2004 Detailed Report Part 2 (Neolithic-Early Iron Age)2005-2006 Detailed Report (Archaic Civic Buildings)2005-2006 Detailed Report (Archaic Houses)The Early Iron Age-Archaic Transition in Crete (Dark Ages Revisited)A Tholos Tomb from Azoria Kavousi (AEK 1, 2010)Kritiko Panorama (2007) PDF Social Organization and Aggregated Settlement Structure in an Archaic Greek City on CreteInformal and Practical Uses of Writing in Graffiti from Azoria, Crete
(cf. XIVth International Congress of Greek and Latin Epigraphy, Berlin, 2012)