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The rock-cut chamber tombs of Labraunda

Opuscula, 2016
The rock-cut chamber tombs form a very small percentage of the rock-cut tombs in Labraunda. The majority of these tombs, situated next to the sanctuary, were studied by Paul Åström in 1950 together with the sarcophagi; two improved from natural caves further from the sanctuary in both directions were found in a topographic survey conducted by Lars ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Labraunda 2012–2013

Opuscula. Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome, 2014
This article is divided into two parts. In the first part, preliminary reports on the archaeological work conducted at the sanctuary during the years 2012 and 2013 is presented, and in the second part, two conservation projects are discussed. The first part includes a description of the excavations at the Split Rock by Lars Karlsson, an account of the ...
Lars Karlsson   +4 more
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Looking at Hecatomnid patronage from Labraunda

Revue des Études Anciennes, 1985
Dynastes cariens, et satrapes de l'Asie Mineure du sud-ouest durant le quatrième siècle avant J.-C, les Hécatomnides sont souvent qualifiés de philhellènes, et se sont vu attribuer une part importante dans l'hellénisation qui toucha la Carie intérieure et les régions voisines au cours de la période précédant la domination d'Alexandre et des Séleucides.
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The ancient floor of the andrôn A at Labraunda: Techniques and iconography

2022
Andrôn A, one of the most important standing buildings of Labraunda, was dedicated between 377/376 and 351/350 bc to Zeus Labraundos by Idrieus, brother of Mausolus and heir to the Hekatomnid dynasty. Like andrôn B of Mausolus, this building was used both as a banqueting hall and as a monumental reception hall for audiences with the satrap.
Guimier-Sorbets, Anne-Marie   +1 more
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The epigraphic tradition at Labraunda seen in the light of Labraunda inscription no. 134:A recent addition to the Olympichos file

2011
An important new inscription was discovered in the sanctuary of Zeus Labraundos in 2002. The inscription belongs to the so-called Olympichos file, and together with I. Labraunda no. 49 it is now numbered I. Labraunda no. 134. The inscription has just been published by Lars Karlsson and Signe Isager in Epigraphica Anatolica 41, 2008, 39-52.
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Labraunda

2016
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