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Penn Museum Archives [Contact Us]
Date added: 2017-03-02
1930-1973
(Bulk: 1931-1939)
Creator:
Jayne, Horace Howard Furness, 1898-1975
Mason, John Alden, 1885-1967 Satterthwaite, Linton, 1897-1978 Extent: 10 linear feet
Piedras Negras is a Maya site in Guatemala particularly noted for the beautifully sculpted stelae and hieroglyphic inscriptions
it has yielded. Between 1931 and 1939 the University of Pennsylvania Museum conducted extensive excavations at this site.
John Allen Mason led the first two seasons of work at the site (1931–1932), and Linton Satterthwaite directed the remaining
six seasons (1933–1939, excluding 1938). Most of the monuments at the Museum borrowed from Guatemala were returned in 1947;
only Stela 14 and one leg from Altar 4 remain on display in the Museum today. The textual records from the excavations of
Piedras Negras consist of 11 linear feet of correspondence, financial records, field notes and diaries, catalogs, and reports
and publication materials. The arrangement of the records reflects the original order insofar as could be detected, and portions
that had been separated over time were re-integrated into this scheme.
Penn Museum Archives [Contact Us]
Date added: 2017-03-02
1930-1967
(Bulk: 1930-1932)
Creator:
Jayne, Horace Howard Furness, 1898-1975
Wulsin, Frederick R. (Frederick Roelker), 1891-1961 Extent: 2.3 linear feet
Tureng Tepe, a site dating from approximately 3100-2900 B.C. through 1900 B.C. in northeast Iran was excavated by Frederick
R. Wulsin during two short field seasons in 1931. Although the expedition was directed by Wulsin, a University of Pennsylvania
Museum staff member who was a curator of Anthropology during 1930-1932, the expedition was sponsored by the Atkins Museum
of Fine Arts in Kansas City, Missouri. Records relating to the excavation at Tureng Tepe are limited, and consist of 2.3 linear
feet of correspondence, field notes, and indexes and catalogues.
Penn Museum Archives [Contact Us]
Date added: 2017-03-02
1931-1950
(Bulk: 1932-1938)
Creator:
Jayne, Horace Howard Furness, 1898-1975
Speiser, E. A. (Ephraim Avigdor), 1902-1965 Extent: 6.25 linear foot
Tepe Gawra is an ancient Mesopotamian settlement in northern Iraq, near the ancient site of Nineveh and fifteen miles northeast
of the modern city of Mosul. It was excavated by archaeologists from the University of Pennsylvania, led by E.A. Speiser,
who first discovered the site in 1927, and later, C. Bache. The excavations showed that the Tepe Gawra site was occupied from
approximately 5000 B.C. to 1500 B.C. The textual records from Tepe Gawra consist of 11.85 linear feet of General Correspondence,
Field Notes, Indexes and Catalogues, Field Registers, and Publications, plus Maps and Drawings. Where possible, a chronological
order was imposed on the Near East records.
Penn Museum Archives [Contact Us]
Date added: 2017-03-02
1920-1976
(Bulk: 1922-1934)
Creator:
Gordon, G. B. (George Byron), 1870-1927
Jayne, Horace Howard Furness, 1898-1975 Legrain, Leon, 1878-1962 Extent: 3.85 linear feet
Sir Leonard Woolley directed the excavations at Ur in southern Iraq from 1922 to 1934 for the Joint Expedition of the British
Museum and the University of Pennsylvania Museum. As part of this involvement, the University of Pennsylvania Museum sent
Leon Legrain, Curator of the Babylonian Section, during the 1924–1925 and 1925–1926 seasons. Most of the records of the Ur
expedition are located at the British Museum. The Museum Archives hold only a few records. The records consist of general
correspondence, indexes and catalogs, publications, and Legrain research. Where possible, a chronological order was imposed
on the Near East records.
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