© 2010 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; 12. Two hoplite soldiers, named Chairedemos and Lykeas, on a funerary relief. Courtesy Archaeological Museum of Piraeus © Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism/Archaeological Receipts Fund; 13. Socrates and Alcibiades, drawing by Paul Avril, engraved by T. Fillon, for a 1906 Paris edition of F. K. Forberg’s Manuel d’érotologie classique; 14. Mourning Athena, courtesy of the Acropolis Museum, Athens © Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism/Archaeological Receipts Fund; 15. Athena’s Silver Owl © Money Museum, Zurich; 16. The north-east corner of the Agora, taken from Agora Excavations 1931–2006: A Pictorial History, Craig Mauzy (The American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 2006). Courtesy of the Trustees of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens; 17. Drinking-cup, courtesy National Museum of Antiquities, Leiden; 18. Socrates summons Alcibiades, courtesy Kunsthalle Bremen; 19. Kylix, Musée du Louvre, Paris; 20. Grave stele, Athens, National Archaeological Museum © Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism/Archaeological Receipts Fund; 21. Socrates and Xanthippe, The Schachzabelbuch of Konrad von Ammenhausen, 1467. Stuttgart, Würt-tembergische Landesbibliothek, Inventar-Nr. Cod. Poet. 2. Fol. 285v. Photo: Marburg Archive; 22. Socrates and Xanthippe, Otto van Veen. Quinti Horatii Flacci Emblemata. Antwerp. Photo: courtesy Getty Research Institute; 23. Fantasy rendering of Socrates, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles (84-B8899); 24. Ostrakon, Agora Excavations 1931–2006: A Pictorial History, Craig Mauzy (The American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 2006). Courtesy of the Trustees of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens; 25. Stele of 405–403 BC, taken from The Peloponnesian War: 431–404 BC, Philip de Souza (Routledge, 2003); 26. Burnt Apollo head taken from Athens: The City Beneath the City: Antiquities from the Metropolitan Railway Excavations (Kapon Editions, 2000). © Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism/Archaeological Receipts Fund; 27. Bronze name ticket, Agora Excavations 1931–2006: A Pictorial History, Craig Mauzy (The American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 2006). Courtesy of the Trustees of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens; 28. New excavation image taken from Athens: The City Beneath the City: Antiquities from the Metropolitan Railway Excavations (Kapon Editions, 2000). © Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism/Archaeological Receipts Fund; 29. Plato teaching Socrates, MS. Ashmole 304, fol. 31, reproduced by permission the Bodleian Library, Oxford; 30. House of the Winds, Greeks Fetching Water from the Well at the Tower of the Winds in Athens, Martinus Christian, Wedseltoft Rorbye, 1839. Courtesy New Carlsberg Glyptotetek, Copenhagen; 31. and 32. The Ludovisi Throne, Rome, Museo Nazionale Romano: inv. 8570; 33. Socrates and the Stag, from G. della Porta, Della fisionomia dell’huomo (Padua, 1627). Photo © Warburg Institute.
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1. Pheidias and the frieze of the Parthenon © Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery; 2. West pediment of the Temple of Aphaia on Aegina, courtesy Staatliche Anitkensammlungen Museum, Glyptotek, Copenhagen; 3. Socrates speaks to two students, Topkapi Museum, Istanbul; 4. Nicholas-André Monsiau, Aspasia Conversing with the Most Illustrious Men of Athens, Musée du Louvre, Paris. Département des Peintures, inv. RF 185; 5. Michiel Sweerts, Plague in Athens, courtesy LA County Museum of Art; 6. A shoe-making workshop, courtesy The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford; 7. Wall painting depicting a dove, Thessaloniki, Archaeological Museum, courtesy Hellenic Culture Organization; 8. Aristophanes Clouds cartoon, California State University; 9. General view of the Agora from the Hephaisteion; 10. The Card Catalogue; 11. Workmen and horse cart removing excavation fill from Agora; 12. Pot-menders at work and 13. Mycenean Chamber tomb diggers, taken from Agora Excavations 1931–2006: A Pictorial History, Craig Mauzy (The American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 2006). Courtesy