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The ‘Red Tomb’ at Cyrene

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2015

Dorothy Thorn*
Affiliation:
West Wickham, Kent, UK

Abstract

An unregistered rock-cut tomb in Cyrene has been identified as that previously visited by two early explorers to Cyrene. Pacho recorded an inscription, which he published, and the interior was recognised as being that shown in Porcher's Watercolour 98 and the plan Watercolour 94 which he presented, with many others, to the Trustees of the British Museum in 1865.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Libyan Studies 2007

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References

Cassels, J. 1955. The Cemeteries of Cyrene. Papers of the British School at Rome 23, 143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cherstich, L. 2002. Tombe sull'Antica Strada Cirene-Balagrae, Tesi in Archeologia e Storia dell'Arte Greca e Romana, Università degli studi ‘G. D'Annunzio’, Chieti.Google Scholar
CIG = Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum.Google Scholar
Pacho, J.-R. 1827. Relation d'un voyage dans la Marmarique, la Cyrenaique et les oasis d'Audjelah et de Maradeh, Paris.Google Scholar
Thorn, J. 2005. The Necropolis of Cyrene: two hundred years of exploration. Monografie di archeologia libica 26, Rome.Google Scholar
Thorn, D. Forthcoming. The Four Seasons of Cyrene: the Excavation and Explorations in 1861 of Lieutenant R. Murdoch Smith R.E. and Lieutenant Edwin A. Porcher R.N., Studia Archaeologica 155, Rome.Google Scholar
Thorn, J. and D., Forthcoming. A Gazetteer of the Cyrene Necropolis, Rome.Google Scholar