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Amazonomachy
Herakles Iconography on Tyrrhenian Amphorae
Parthenon 1 Parthenon
Amazons, Thracians, and Scythians , Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies, 24:2 (1983:Summer) P.105
The Pedimental Sculpture of the Hephaisteion
The Amazon Myth in Western Literature. Bruce Robert Magee Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College
Parnassus, Delphi, and the Thyiades Mcinerney, Jeremy Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies; Fall 1997; 38, 3; Proquest Pg
The Amazons of Exekias and Eupolis: Demystifying Changes in Gender Roles Marisa Anne Infante Southern Methodist University,
[email protected]
Pagan and Mythological Statuary in Asia Minor Author(S): INE JACOBS Source: American Journal of Archaeology, Vol
The Ionic Friezes of the Hephaisteion in the Athenian Agora
(Ad)Dressing the Other: the Amazon in Greek Art
Herakles and Theseus on a Red-Figured Louterion 337
Monsters, Manslayers, and Militant Women in Classical Greece
The City of Dionysos: a Social and Historical Study of the Ionian City of Teos
Restaging Greek Artworks in Roman Times in Part II
Parthenon East Metope XI: Herakles and the Gigantomachy
The Amazonomachy on Attic and Tarantine Funerary Naiskoi
Technical Observations on the Sculptures from the Temple of Zeus at Olympia
The Asia Tic Artemis
Top View
Notes on the Development of the Greek Frieze Brunilde S
GIRLS GONE WILD: a SPECULATIVE 3D RENDERING of the LESSER ATTALID MONUMENT AMAZONOMACHY By
Shamanism and the Ancient Greek Mysteries
Iconography of the Amazons
Amazons: Comparative Study of Amazon Mythology in Ancient Literature and Art
The Bassae-Frieze. 200 Years of Guesswork
Heroes, Otherness, and Identity in Painted Amazonomachies
Greek Mythology S
The Public Sacred Identity of Roman Ascalon
Dionysos in Classical Athens
The Pennsylvania State University Schreyer Honors College
Death of an Amazon
The Acrobatic Body in Ancient Greek Society
The Composition of the Amazonomachy on the Shield of Athena Parthenos1
The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens
Marriage and Abduction Myths of the Ancient Greeks: a Means of Reinforcing the Patriarchy