Alan Wace

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Alan Wace
FSA
Wace at Asine in 1922
Born(1879-07-13)13 July 1879
Cambridge, England
Died9 November 1957(1957-11-09) (aged 78)
Athens, Greece
Resting placeFirst Cemetery of Athens
Spouse
Helen Pence
(m. 1925)
Children
Mycenaean civilisation
Institutions

Alan John Bayard Wace

FSA (13 July 1879 – 9 November 1957) was an English archaeologist, who served as director of the British School at Athens (BSA) between 1914 and 1923.[a] He excavated widely in Thessaly, Laconia and Egypt and at the Bronze Age site of Mycenae
in Greece. He was also an authority on Greek textiles and a prolific collector of Greek embroidery.

Educated at Shrewsbury School and Pembroke College, Cambridge, Wace's initial scholarly interests focused on Ancient Greek sculpture and modern Greek anthropology. He first attended the BSA in 1902, before moving to the British School at Rome (BSR). While a member of the BSR, he participated in the BSA's excavations at Sparta and in the region of Laconia in southern Greece. Between 1907 and 1912, he surveyed widely in the northern Greek region of Thessaly, before taking a post at the Scottish University of St Andrews in 1912.

In 1914, Wace returned to the BSA as its director, though his archaeological work was soon interrupted by the outbreak of the

tholos
tombs which largely proved the "Helladic Heresy" correct.

Wace lost his position at the BSA in 1923, and spent ten years as a curator of textiles at the

Farouk I University. During his tenure there, he continued to excavate at Mycenae and unsuccessfully attempted to locate the tomb of Alexander the Great. He was sacked after the 1952 Egyptian Revolution, but continued to excavate, publish and study until his death in 1957. His daughter, Lisa French
, accompanied him on several campaigns at Mycenae and later directed excavations there.

Early life and education

Alan John Bayard Wace was born on 13 July 1879, at 4 Camden Place in

mayor of Cambridge in 1889–1891,[5] the first university academic to hold the post. He died in 1893, whereupon the family moved to Shrewsbury, and Wace (along with his elder brother Emeric) attended Shrewsbury School, a public school in the town, where he was head boy in 1898. He entered the University of Cambridge on a scholarship in the same year, matriculating in classics at Pembroke College. Emeric died shortly before the end of Wace's second year, in which Wace obtained a First, the highest possible grade, in Part I of the tripos examinations. Wace's tutor, the classicist R. A. Neil, suggested that he study classical archaeology for Part II, his final year:[4] Wace subsequently achieved a First with distinction in the examinations of 1901.[6]

Wace acquired a particular interest in

Annual of the British School at Athens, in 1902.[11] The project became the nucleus of his 1935 monograph, An Approach to Greek Sculpture.[12][b] His biographer David Gill describes Wace as "perhaps one of the strongest students of Hellenistic sculpture to emerge from Cambridge".[10] Wace also developed an interest in Greek textiles, perhaps from the embroiderer Louisa Pesel, who became an associate of the BSA in the same year as Wace joined, or perhaps from the school's director, Robert Carr Bosanquet, who collected them.[7]

Early academic career

Wace moved to the British School at Rome (BSR) in 1903 on a Craven studentship. He was elected as a fellow of Pembroke College in 1904.[4] Wace worked briefly as a librarian at the BSR between 1905 and 1906,[8] supported by a grant from the British government to allow the BSR to catalogue its sculpture collections. During this period, Wace acted as assistant to Thomas Ashby, who was himself acting as director in the place of Henry Stuart Jones, who had been incapacitated by illness.[13] In the spring of 1906, the directorship was formally declared vacant; both Wace and Ashby applied, Ashby was appointed, and Wace was offered the assistant directorship, which he refused. He remained at the BSR; in 1909, he was considered as a possible successor to Ashby (whose contract was due to expire in 1911), though not appointed.[4]

From 1904 onwards, the BSA was engaged in an extended campaign in the

American School of Classical Studies in Rome, of the Magnesian peninsula in Thessaly.[20]

potsherds
from the sites of Tsangli and Rakhmani in Thessaly, from Wace and Thompson's Prehistoric Thessaly

Bosanquet left the BSA in 1906; Wace was one of three candidates, alongside Dawkins and Duncan Mackenzie, shortlisted for the directorship.[21] Wace was noted in a meeting of the school's managing committee as "a competent and keen worker and capable of extracting work from others", but was also considered inexperienced (being the youngest of the three), and the committee criticised his "slovenly" writing style.[22][c] Wace was ultimately rejected in favour of Dawkins.[4] Following Dawkins' appointment, he and Wace toured through the Dodecanese in the summer of 1906 and in 1907. The pair recorded inscriptions, collected embroidered artwork and pursued Dawkins's interest in modern Greek dialects.[24] Wace organised an exhibition of Greek embroidery at Cambridge's Fitzwilliam Museum in 1906, almost exclusively composed of pieces he had collected with Dawkins and studied with Pesel and John Myers, another alumnus of the BSA.[25] Wace wrote articles for The Burlington Magazine, an academic journal covering fine art, throughout the first decade of the 1900s, and continued to exhibit his collection along with Dawkins, including at the Burlington Fine Arts Club in 1914.[26]

In June 1907, Wace and Droop travelled to

magoulas. They discovered the mound of Zerelia in 1907, then returned with Thompson and funding from Cambridge University in June 1908. Wace and Thompson continued to visit Thessaly until 1912, recovering numerous artefacts which they donated to the Fitzwilliam Museum; the results of the work were published as Prehistoric Thessaly.[29] The archaeologist Helen Waterhouse attributes Wace's later specialism in prehistory to the enthusiasm for Neolithic pottery he developed in Thessaly.[30] During their Thessalian travels, Wace, Thompson and Arthur Woodward, with whom Wace made some of his visits, also noted several ancient inscriptions, some of which they published themselves; Woodward also published other texts collected by Wace and Thompson.[31]

Between 1910 and 1912, Wace conducted, alongside Thompson, anthropological research among the nomadic Vlach people of Epirus. The two accompanied the Vlachs on their annual summer migration, which lasted eight days, from the lowland site of Tirnavo to Samarina in the Pindus mountains:[9] on the outbreak of the First Balkan War in October 1912, he wrote that "the annual disturbance" in the region had begun "earlier than usual".[32] The outbreak of war halted his research, the results of which he published in a book co-authored with Thompson in 1914.[33] By 1912, Wace was considered an expert on both Aegean prehistory and classical sculpture.[34] That year, he took a post at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, as a lecturer in ancient history and archaeology.[8] He left his fellowship at Pembroke in 1913.[4]

Appointment as director of the British School at Athens

Wace, who had previously served on the BSA's managing committee, succeeded Dawkins as director of the BSA in 1914.

First World War.[34] Wace's students at the BSA included the classical archaeologists Frank Stubbings [de], Vincent Desborough, Vronwy Hankey and Helen Waterhouse.[37] Stubbings later recalled a humorous "open meeting" hosted by Wace at the BSA, in which he asked visiting academics to give a lecture based on six slides they had never previously seen. Georg Karo, the director of the German Archaeological Institute at Athens, attended the meeting in costume as a fräulein.[28]

First World War

Black and white photograph showing men in military uniform, posing in the gateway of an ancient structure.
French troops at the Beulé Gate during the 1917 occupation of Athens

The First World War limited the opportunities for archaeological work in Greece and all but removed the usual influx of academic visitors to the BSA.[4] Wace and Karo agreed that the war should suspend contact between them and their institutions: in a chance meeting on Christmas Day 1914, Karo told Wace that the professional relationship between the DAI and his own personal friendship with Wace were "in abeyance" until the end of hostilities.[38] Wace opened the school's hostel as accommodation to those employed by the British government: he was instructed by William Erskine, a British diplomat in the city, not to host anyone of whom Erskine disapproved.[39]

Wace spent three weeks in January 1915 surveying in Macedonia, looking for potential excavation sites.[40] During 1915–1916,[4] Wace was posted to the chancery of the British legation to Greece, where he worked in cryptography and cryptanalysis. His work included organising support for British subjects fleeing the Ottoman Empire, as well as gathering military intelligence from them. Late in 1915, after the Gallipoli landings, Wace devised and established the British passport control office in Athens, which served as a front for British intelligence, in which he identified people suspected of attempting to travel to British-controlled Egypt as spies.[41] He spent his free time during the war tending to the BSA's garden, organising its library and its antiquities collection, and working on Mycenaean pottery in the National Archaeological Museum.[42]

Although the BSA was forbidden to excavate from 1914, the

classical Greek art was a renaissance ... of the same artistic spirit that inspired Knossos and Phaestos, Tiryns and Mycenae".[44] Their argument that the culture of Bronze Age Greece was primarily "Mycenaean as opposed to Cretan" ran contrary to the prevailing opinion of the time, by which Minoan Crete was considered the dominant influence on mainland Greece.[45] John Percival Droop later called Wace and Blegen's ideas the "Helladic Heresy".[46]

On 1 December [O.S. 18 November] 1916, British and French forces invaded Piraeus, the harbour of Athens, in an attempt to overturn Greece's neutrality in the war.[47] Wace and other British officials were evacuated onto the troop ship HMT Abbassieh, which remained outside Athens until the following year.[4] During his enforced lodging there, Wace explored the eastern side of the island of Salamis, a short distance from Piraeus, and reported to the Greek authorities on the need for conservation work on some ancient wall-paintings there.[48] The BSA was closed during this period, which was later referred to by Rachel Hood, the wife of the BSA director Sinclair Hood, as the "difficult times",[49] and Wace continued to work for the British legation.[4] On the school's reopening in 1917, Wace was appointed to a committee of the Greek Ministry of Education to award prizes for sculpture and painting.[50]

Post-war archaeology and the "Helladic Heresy"

Ivory figurine showing three figures; two seated women and a child between them
Figurine, known as the "Ivory Triad", found by Wace on the citadel of Mycenae in 1939, called "the most remarkable of all Mycenaean ivories" by Waterhouse in 1986[51]

In November 1919, Wace's contract as director of the BSA was renewed for another three years, and he left the British legation. Gill credits Wace's reputation with attracting several non-British students to the BSA, including the Swedish Etruscologist Axel Boëthius and the papyrologist Jacob Hondius. Wace also assisted in the foundation of the Museum of Greek Handicrafts.[4] He suggested expanding the BSA's archaeological remit to include the study of geology and botany, but his proposals were not enacted.[52] As a result of political rioting, which took place in Athens at the end of July 1920, Wace opened the hostel of the BSA to women, against the opposition of some of the school's managing committee.[53] According to the archaeologist Bernard Ashmole, the decision was ultimately forced when the British Minister to Greece ordered all British students in Athens, male and female, to be moved into the hostel during Wace's absence in November.[54]

In the early 1920s, Wace led the excavations of the BSA at the site of Mycenae in southern Greece. The project was encouraged by Arthur Evans, who had excavated at Knossos on Crete from 1900 and introduced the concept of "Minoan Civilisation" to scholarship.[55] Mycenae had previously been established, after the 1876–1877 excavations at Grave Circle A there, as the type site for the "Mycenaean" civilisation of the mainland.[56] Evans hoped that further excavations at Mycenae would provide evidence for his theory that Knossos was the centre of the dominant power of the Bronze Age Aegean, in line with the Classical myths of a Cretan thalassocracy under King Minos.[d][55] Evans assisted the BSA in persuading both the Greek government and the archaeologist Christos Tsountas, who held the necessary permit, to allow them to excavate with Wace as field director.[55] He also supported the excavation financially, donating £100 (equivalent to £4,273 in 2021) towards the excavation of the monument known as the Tomb of Aegisthus.[55]

The main priority of the excavations was to establish the chronological relationship between the

tholos tombs at the site. Evans believed that the two sets of tombs were broadly contemporary, and that both represented the burials of Cretan-based rulers of Mycenae.[58] This ran contrary to the view proposed by Wace and Blegen in 1918, by which the culture of mainland Greece ("Helladic" culture) had remained fundamentally autochthonous through the Shaft Graves period until the end of the Bronze Age.[45] Under Wace and Blegen's model, the tholoi were correctly dated considerably later than both Grave Circle A (c. 1600–1450 BCE) and the apogee of Neopalatial Minoan civilisation on Crete, which ended around 1500 BCE.[59] This would represent a "crescendo" of monumentality and elaboration in Mycenae's tombs, whereas Evans had argued that Mycenae had become subjected and subordinated to Crete, and that this produced a "diminuendo" in the site's wealth and ostentation.[60] According to Evans, the oldest tombs on the site were the largest and most developed: the two tholoi known as the Treasury of Atreus and the Tomb of Clytemnestra.[61]

Wace intended to fully excavate all seven of the thus-far unexcavated tholoi between 1920 and 1923.[60] In 1920 and 1921, he made small-scale excavations in the Treasury of Atreus, which failed to find conclusive evidence for its date.[62] Between 15 June and 8 July 1922, the Tomb of Aegisthus was excavated under Winifred Lamb, who was serving as Wace's second-in-charge.[63] This would be the only tomb fully excavated during the 1920–1923 campaigns, though Wace had all of the tholoi re-examined and their first architectural plans drawn up by the Anglo-Dutch draughtsman Piet de Jong,[60] whom Wace hired in 1920 for what was de Jong's first archaeological job.[64] Planned excavations of the Treasury of Atreus in 1923 had to be abandoned due to safety concerns about the tomb's roof, which had partially collapsed.[65]

By May 1923, Wace and Lamb had constructed the outline of a three-phase chronological model for the tholoi at Mycenae,[63] in which they argued for a progressive increase in the scale and monumentality of the tombs. They were able to date the Tomb of Aegisthus to early LH IIA (c. 1510–1480 BCE),[66] and to show that it was earlier than the larger Treasury of Atreus, thereby providing strong evidence for Wace and Blegen's chronological model.[60] Evans reacted bitterly to Wace's findings, disputing the chronological judgements he had made and writing to Droop that he had "never yet [seen] any work so systematically wrong-headed."[67] During the period of his work at Mycenae, Wace also assisted Blegen in the ASCSA's excavations at Zygouries, a site between Mycenae and Corinth.[4]

Wace remained at the BSA until later in 1923, when the school's managing committee declined to renew his appointment. Waterhouse suggests that this was due to Wace's disfavour with influential members of the committee, who had disagreed with his decision to excavate at Mycenae, preferring the school to focus on sites of the classical period.[68] The historian Cathy Gere has suggested that Evans, a member of the committee, may have been the primary force behind Wace's departure.[69]}}Several Greek professors and archaeological ephors wrote to the BSA's London committee, expressing their regret at the decision and crediting Wace with establishing "the very high scientific reputation" of the school.[70] Wace was succeeded by Arthur Woodward, who had been his deputy director since 1910.[71]

Victoria and Albert Museum

Portrait of Evans: an elderly man in a raincoat and hat, in front of an ancient stone wall.
Arthur Evans was a prominent critic of Wace's ideas about the relationship between Minoan and Mycenaean civilisation, which were dubbed the "Helladic Heresy".

After his dismissal from the BSA, Wace lectured at

University of Pennsylvania Museum in 1924, but refused it to take care of family commitments in Britain, following the death of his brother-in-law. He also declined in 1925 an invitation to excavate at Beth She'an in Mandatory Palestine on the museum's behalf. Evans continued to write critically of Wace in the press, including in The Times in April 1924. Wace, meanwhile, was selected to write the chapters on the Aegean Bronze Age for the Cambridge Ancient History.[72]

Wace worked between 1924 and 1934 as deputy keeper of textiles at the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London.[7] The Greek embroideries he collected with Dawkins formed the basis of the V&A's collection of these objects.[73] While at the V&A, he published widely on embroidery from various periods, including a preface for Louisa Pesel's 1929 handbook for embroiderers based on seventeenth-century samplers and an exhibition catalogue co-written with his wife in the same year.[4] In 1929, he organised the Exhibition of English Decorative Art, held at Lansdowne House, described in one of Wace's obituaries as his greatest achievement in the field of textiles.[74] Wace did not return to archaeology in Greece during this period, though he joined Blegen at the latter's excavations of Troy in 1933.[4]

In 1926, Wace was asked by Sydney Cockerell, director of the Fitzwilliam Museum, to authenticate a marble statuette (later known as the "Fitzwilliam Goddess") being offered for sale to the museum by Charles Seltman, a lecturer in classics at Queens' College, Cambridge. The statue was claimed to be Minoan in date: Wace considered it authentic, as subsequently did Evans.[75] Wace wrote about the statuette in The Times, declaring it "the earliest piece of true sculpture found on Greek soil"; in a letter to Cockerell on 12 February, he called it "ravishingly beautiful".[76] By the end of the year, the statue was widely suspected to be a forgery: Wace published a monograph on it in May 1927, titled A Cretan Statuette in the Fitzwilliam Museum: A Study in Minoan Costume,[77] but reviews of the book in 1928 largely doubted the piece's authenticity.[78] The museum recategorised it as "of uncertain date or authenticity" in 1961 and removed it from display in 1991;[79] by this point, it was generally considered a forgery dating from the 1920s.[80]

Laurence Professorship at Cambridge

Wace became the second holder of the Laurence Professorship of Classical Archaeology, succeeding Arthur Bernard Cook on the latter's retirement in 1934.[7] He maintained his interest in Greek textiles, writing a 1935 catalogue for an exhibition entitled Mediterranean and Near Eastern Embroideries, based on the collection of Beatrice Lindell Cook, whose husband had collected them in Egypt; the book is still considered a standard work in the twenty-first century.[81]

Wace returned to Mycenae in July 1939, following a visiting appointment at the

Greece was under invasion from Italy, Wace collaborated with the Greek archaeologist Spyridon Marinatos on a study of the façade of the Treasury of Atreus.[86]

Black-and-white photograph of uniformed soldiers entering a cinema
British soldiers in Cairo, 1943: Wace conducted intelligence work in the city after his evacuation from Greece.

In April 1941,[85] shortly before the fall of Greece to Axis forces in May, Wace and other British intelligence officers relocated to Alexandria in Egypt, where he debriefed British troops evacuated there from Greece.[87] He subsequently worked for MI6 in Cairo. His duties included editing and publishing intelligence reports, and he ran the department providing false passports and documentation to agents of the British Special Operations Executive operating in the Aegean.[88] He was evacuated briefly to Jerusalem in 1942, shortly before the First Battle of El Alamein.[4] To assist with his espionage work, he called on the archaeologist and BSA alumnus Martin Robertson, who joined him in Cairo in late 1942.[89] Wace developed a cooperative relationship with Rodney Young, an American archaeologist turned intelligence officer, who established the "Greek Desk" of the Office of Strategic Services in the city from 1943: their acquaintance allowed British and American intelligence to avoid the inter-Allied rivalry that characterised their relationship in İzmir.[90]

Wace retired from his Cambridge professorship in 1944, having reached the age limit of sixty-five for normal service and realising that he would be unable to return to Cambridge during the war.

Farouk I University.[e][8]

Professorship at Alexandria and retirement

Alongside the French Egyptologist

Liverpool Museum, which later purchased them.[4] In 1947, he attempted to find the Tomb of Alexander the Great in Alexandria, unsuccessfully excavating at a hill known as Kom al-Dikka, then widely believed to be the tomb's location.[93] He also excavated a Hellenistic temple at Hermopolis Magna in central Egypt, dedicated to the Ptolemaic ruler Ptolemy III; the results of this project were published posthumously in 1959.[94] During the 1950s, he wrote short stories featuring a fictional archaeologist named George Evesham; two of these were published in the journal Archaeology.[95]

Wace was a member of the

Suez Canal Zone, including the killing of fifty Egyptian police officers in January, led to a military coup which overthrew King Farouk and imposed a nationalist government led by Mohamed Naguib and Gamal Abdel Nasser.[98] The new government sacked Wace, who moved to Cyprus,[4] and later to a flat in Athens.[99] From 1952 until 1955, he visited Princeton each year:[4] he maintained membership of the IAS between September 1952 and June 1954.[96] He also undertook study seasons at Mycenae in 1956 and 1957.[4]

Wace experienced poor cardiovascular health over a period of several years. He suffered a heart attack in the spring of 1957,[4] though was able later that year to assist with the rearrangement of the Mycenaean Room of the National Archaeological Museum of Athens, and to attend the resumption of the Mycenae excavations under Ioannis Papadimitriou [el].[100] Wace died of a further heart attack on 9 November 1957, at his home in Athens.[101] He was buried in the Protestant section of the First Cemetery of Athens.[4]

Personal life, character and honours

The Scottish writer Compton Mackenzie, who met Wace during the latter's work with British refugees from Turkey during 1915–1916, wrote of him as:

A delightful combination of great scholarship and humour, a worldly humour too and not in the least pedagogic ... a tall, slim man full of nervous energy, with a fresh complexion and an extraordinarily merry pair of light blue eyes.[102]

Wace's former student Frank Stubbings, in a 1958 obituary, described Wace as being "virtually incapable of making even a rough sketch of any object", despite an outstanding visual memory. He went on to describe Wace as having "a slightly ponderous indignation with those whom (often rightly) he thought stupid and pretentious", but as being "really a very modest man, sensitive, and easily hurt, but full of kindness and, in the right company, of fun."[28] The historian Arnold Toynbee, who visited the BSA in the 1911–1912 academic year, described Wace and Thompson thus:

They hunted together like a couple of hounds; and, like hounds on the scent, they were indifferent, while chasing their quarry, to heat, cold, hunger, or exposure to the elements. They set one an exacting standard of physical endurance.[103]

Wace was married to the American archaeologist Helen Wace (née Pence), a former student of the BSR who had worked on the Roman port of Ostia.[104] The couple met at Mycenae in June 1922 and became engaged on a yacht cruise in May 1923, which was also attended by Blegen and his fellow American archaeologists Bert Hodge Hill and Leicester Holland, as well as all three of their future wives, Elizabeth Pierce, Ida Thallon, and Louise Adams. Wace and Pence married in St Albans on 20 June 1925;[4] the archaeologist Elizabeth (Lisa) Bayard French, born in 1931, was their daughter.[105] Lisa Wace attended her father's excavations at Mycenae from the age of eight, and directed excavations there from 1959 to 1969 alongside William Taylour.[106] In 1964, Helen Wace published a series of Alan's fictional writings as Greece Untrodden.[107]

Wace was made a doctor

Petrie Medal,[4] awarded by the University of London for distinguished contributions to archaeology.[109]

Selected works

As sole author

As co-author

Footnotes

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ a b The British School at Athens, like its sister institution, the British School at Rome, is a research institute specialising in archaeology, art history and classical studies. It is one of Greece's foreign archaeological institutes.[1]
  2. ^ A. W. Lawrence, who succeeded Wace as Laurence Professor at Cambridge, described An Approach to Greek Sculpture as "the only worthwhile work" on its subject.[9]
  3. ^ Arthur Evans would later accuse Wace of writing "like a pettifogging lawyer".[23]
  4. ^ See e.g. Thucydides 1.4: John Pendlebury would later explicitly connect the myth of Minos with Knossos under the label of the "Minoan thalassocracy".[57]
  5. ^ Known since 1952 as Alexandria University.[92]

References

  1. ^ Whitling 2019, p. 3.
  2. ^ Hood 1958, p. 158; Wills 2015, p. 148 (for Cambridge); Gill 2004 (for date and address).
  3. ^ Stubbings 1958, p. 263.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Gill 2004.
  5. ^ The Eagle 1893, p. 545. Gill gives only his second term, from 1890 to 1891.[4]
  6. ^ Gill 2004; Wills 2015, p. 148 (for the date).
  7. ^ a b c d e Wills 2015, p. 148.
  8. ^ a b c d Hood 1958, p. 158.
  9. ^ a b c Hood 1998, p. 42.
  10. ^ a b Gill 2011, p. 104.
  11. ^ Gill 2004. Part of the project was published as Wace 1902.[4]
  12. ^ Wace 1935; Hood 1998, p. 42.
  13. ^ Gill 2004; Freeman 2007, pp. 313–314 (for Jones's ill health).
  14. ^ a b Catling 1998, p. 20.
  15. ^ Catling 1998, p. 26.
  16. ^ a b c Catling 1998, p. 21.
  17. ^ Gill 2004; Wace 1906, p. 407
  18. ^ Gill 2011, p. 172.
  19. ^ Gill 2004; George 1912, p. x; Traquair & Wace 1909.
  20. ^ Gill 2011, p. 179.
  21. ^ Gill 2011, p. 56.
  22. ^ Gill 2011, p. 57.
  23. ^ Koehl 1990, p. 45.
  24. ^ Hood 1998, p. 43; Mackridge 2009, pp. 49–50.
  25. ^ Simpson 2015, pp. 187–188; Dunbabin 1954, pp. 311–312 (for Myers's BSA connection).
  26. ^ Simpson 2015, p. 190.
  27. ^ a b Wace & Droop 1907, p. 310.
  28. ^ a b c Stubbings 1958, p. 267.
  29. ^ Gill 2004; Wace & Thompson 1912.
  30. ^ Waterhouse 1986, p. 23.
  31. ^ Gill 2011, p. 108.
  32. ^ Allen 2011, pp. 325–326.
  33. ^ Gill 2004; Wace & Thompson 1914.
  34. ^ a b Gill 2011, p. 62.
  35. ^ Hood 1958, p. 158; Wills 2015, p. 148; Gill 2011, p. 69.
  36. ^ Hood 1958, p. 158; Wills 2015, p. 148; Gill 2011, p. 61.
  37. ^ "Frank Stubbings". The Telegraph. 10 December 2005. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  38. ^ Clogg 2009, p. 165.
  39. ^ Clogg 2009, p. 168.
  40. ^ Gill 2011, p. 183.
  41. ^ a b Allen 2011, p. 20.
  42. ^ Waterhouse 1986, pp. 24, 71–72.
  43. ^ Lord 1947, p. 101; Gill 2004.
  44. ^ Wace & Blegen 1918, p. 189.
  45. ^ a b Wace & Blegen 1918, pp. 118–119; Galanakis 2007, p. 241.
  46. ^ Droop 1926.
  47. ^ Beaton 2019, pp. 211–212.
  48. ^ Stubbings 1958, p. 270.
  49. ^ Hood 1998, p. 44.
  50. ^ Hood 1998, p. 44; Gere 2006, p. 111.
  51. ^ Waterhouse 1986, pp. 35, 109.
  52. ^ Waterhouse 1986, p. 25.
  53. ^ Hood 1998, p. 44. For the riots in Athens, see Travlos 2020, p. 384
  54. ^ Quoted in Gill 2002, p. 501.
  55. ^ a b c d Galanakis 2007, p. 240.
  56. ^ Wace & Lamb 1922, p. 185.
  57. ^ Pendlebury 1939, p. 287.
  58. ^ Evans 1929, pp. 48–49; Galanakis 2007, p. 242.
  59. ^ Shelmerdine 2008, p. 4; Galanakis 2007.
  60. ^ a b c d Galanakis 2007, p. 255.
  61. ^ Evans 1929, p. 67.
  62. ^ Wace 1923b, p. 338.
  63. ^ a b Galanakis 2007, p. 245.
  64. ^ Lang 2000, p. 381.
  65. ^ Wace & Holland 1923, p. 296.
  66. ^ Shelmerdine 2008, p. 4; Wace & Holland 1923, pp. 306–313.
  67. ^ Koehl 1990, pp. 45, 48.
  68. ^ Waterhouse 1986, pp. 26–27.
  69. ^ Gere 2006, p. 113. For Evans's committee membership, see "Rules and Regulations of the British School at Athens", 1923–1926
  70. ^ Hood 1998, pp. 44–45.
  71. ^ Gill 2004; Gill 2011, p. 219; Oliver 2012, p. 304.
  72. ^ Gill 2004; Wace 1923a; Wace 1924.
  73. ^ Simpson 2015, p. 196.
  74. ^ The Times, 11 November 1957.
  75. ^ Butcher & Gill 1993, p. 386.
  76. ^ Butcher & Gill 1993, pp. 387–389.
  77. ^ Butcher & Gill 1993, p. 391; Wace 1927.
  78. ^ Butcher & Gill 1993, p. 398.
  79. ^ Butcher & Gill 1993, p. 400.
  80. ^ Butcher & Gill 1993, p. 401.
  81. ^ Simpson 2015, p. 190; Gill 2004 (for the Cooks).
  82. ^ Waterhouse 1986, p. 35.
  83. ^ Hope Simpson & Dickinson 1979, p. 34; Shelmerdine 2008, p. 4 (for the dates).
  84. ^ Clogg 2009, p. 168; Allen 2011, p. 20.
  85. ^ a b Waterhouse 1986, p. 36.
  86. ^ Papadopoulos 1993, p. 341.
  87. ^ Allen 2011, p. 62.
  88. ^ Allen 2011, pp. 120–121; Gill 2004.
  89. ^ Sparkes 2006, p. 324.
  90. ^ Allen 2011, pp. 120–121.
  91. ^ Gill 2004; The Times, 11 November 1957.
  92. ^ "AU History". Alexandria University. 6 December 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  93. ^ Papadopoulos 1993, p. 338.
  94. ^ Gill 2004; Spawforth 2020, n. 69 (for details of the Hermopolis temple); Wace, Megaw & Skeat 1959.
  95. ^ Wace 1954, p. 42 (editor's note); Wills 2015, p. 152.
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Bibliography

Academic offices
Preceded by
Cambridge University

1934 - 1944
Succeeded by
Arnold Walter Lawrence