
Ida Carleton Thallon Hill a adăugat 4 fotografii
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Ida

In memoriam
Death on ship Atlantic returning to Greece, no shipping records. Ida Carleton Thallon-Hill was born August 11, 1875 in Brooklyn, a daughter of John and Grace Green Thallon. She came from Packer Collegiate Institute to Vassar College, where she received her A.B. degree in 1897 and her M.A. in 1901. In 1899-1901 she was a student in the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. From 1903-1905 she studied at Columbia University, which conferred the degree of Ph.D. upon her in 1905. Her teaching experience was all at Vassar, but, remarkably, in three subjects: Greek, 1901-1903; Latin, 1906-1907; History, 1907-1924. Her subsequent marriage to the distinguished archaeologist, Dr. Bert Hodge Hill, and her departure to Athens terminated her teaching career at Vassar. Her first publication came from her student days in Athens. While there, Ida and her friend Lida Shaw King, with two men students of the American School, excavated a cave sacred to Pan and the Nymphs at Vari, and the marble reliefs found in it were published by Ida Thallon in the American Journal of Archaeology 7 (1903). Next, in 1906, came her doctoral dissertation on sculpture, The Date of Damophon of Messene. While Associate Professor of History at Vassar she produced a source book for student use, Readings in Greek History (1914); Rome of the Kings (1925); and made a notable contribution to the volume Vassar Medieval Studies (1923) with her essay "A Medieval Humanist: Michael Akominatos." After her return to Athens, she published in collaboration with Lida Shaw King a volume in the Corinth Series of the American School (IV, I, 1929) "Decorated Architectural Terracottas." Just before her death, her book The Ancient City of Athens (1953) was published.

Ida Carleton Thallon Hill a adăugat 4 fotografii
acum un an
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