Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Report on Excavations at the Toumba and Tables of Vardaróftsa, Macedonia, 1925, 1926.
View through CrossRef
The Toumba and Tables of Vardaróftsa lie at the south end of a ridge that separates Lake Amátovo and the Vardár river (Fig. 1), some 35 kilometres N.W. of Salonika (Fig. 2). To south and east the ridge falls gently to the lower levels; more abruptly on the west to the river's edge. Northward, the ridge extends to where the Toumba of Várdino crowns its other extremity, looking down on the flats round Karasouli.Between the Toumba of Vardaróftsa and the river, where now stand the village church and a few houses, rises the fine spring which no doubt attracted the original settlers to the site and assured its continuous occupation. A further reason for the selection of the site was perhaps the fact that the river is easily fordable at this point, and travellers passing from the Struma valley into Western Macedonia would make the crossing here. In Homeric times, when the Vardár formed the frontier of Priam's kingdom, the place must have had strategic importance, and in later times, when the successive settlements had raised the artificial mass high above the surrounding level, it must have offered a valuable strong-point from which the whole country-side could be commanded.
Title: Report on Excavations at the Toumba and Tables of Vardaróftsa, Macedonia, 1925, 1926.
Description:
The Toumba and Tables of Vardaróftsa lie at the south end of a ridge that separates Lake Amátovo and the Vardár river (Fig.
1), some 35 kilometres N.
W.
of Salonika (Fig.
2).
To south and east the ridge falls gently to the lower levels; more abruptly on the west to the river's edge.
Northward, the ridge extends to where the Toumba of Várdino crowns its other extremity, looking down on the flats round Karasouli.
Between the Toumba of Vardaróftsa and the river, where now stand the village church and a few houses, rises the fine spring which no doubt attracted the original settlers to the site and assured its continuous occupation.
A further reason for the selection of the site was perhaps the fact that the river is easily fordable at this point, and travellers passing from the Struma valley into Western Macedonia would make the crossing here.
In Homeric times, when the Vardár formed the frontier of Priam's kingdom, the place must have had strategic importance, and in later times, when the successive settlements had raised the artificial mass high above the surrounding level, it must have offered a valuable strong-point from which the whole country-side could be commanded.
Related Results
The Toumba building at Lefkandi: a statistical method for detecting a design-unit
The Toumba building at Lefkandi: a statistical method for detecting a design-unit
This methodological paper uses the measurements of the Early Iron Age Toumba building at Lefkandi to study whether a single design-unit can be detected in the data set. Cosine quan...
An Early Witness of Alfonsine Astronomy: The London Tables for 1336
An Early Witness of Alfonsine Astronomy: The London Tables for 1336
In the 1320s, a group of astronomers in Paris recast the Alfonsine Tables composed in Toledo in about 1272 under the patronage of Alfonso X, king of Castile and León. The tables co...
The 21st-century epigraphic harvest from Macedonia
The 21st-century epigraphic harvest from Macedonia
On 16 June 1936 the young American epigraphist Charles Edson signed an agreement with the Berlin Academy of Sciences for the publication of all Greek inscriptions from Macedonia (F...
Why is sad music pleasurable? A possible role for prolactin
Why is sad music pleasurable? A possible role for prolactin
A hedonic theory of music and sadness is proposed. Some listeners report that nominally sad music genuinely makes them feel sad. It is suggested that, for these listeners, sad affe...
Why is Sad Music Pleasurable? A Possible Role for Prolactin
Why is Sad Music Pleasurable? A Possible Role for Prolactin
A hedonic theory of music and sadness is proposed. Some listeners report that nominally sad music genuinely makes them feel sad. It is suggested that, for these listeners, sad affe...
Underreporting in Political Science Survey Experiments: Comparing Questionnaires to Published Results
Underreporting in Political Science Survey Experiments: Comparing Questionnaires to Published Results
The accuracy of published findings is compromised when researchers fail to report and adjust for multiple testing. Preregistration of studies and the requirement of preanalysis pla...
Excavations at Sparta, 1926: § 1.—Introductory
Excavations at Sparta, 1926: § 1.—Introductory
A Short account of the campaign of 1926 at Sparta has already appeared in the Annual Report of the British School for the Session 1925–26, and consequently need not be repeated her...
The City Nuzu
The City Nuzu
1. NUZI AND THE HURRIAN:S the excavations at Nuzi (Kirkuk, Iraq) and their contribution to our knowledge of the history of the Hurrians. By Robert H. Pfeiffer. (From the Smithsonia...