D. White et al., “Seven Recently Discovered Sculptures from Cyrene, Eastern Libya,” Expedition 18, no. 2, 14–28.
White 1977
D. White, “Rev. of S. Stucchi, Architettura cirenaica,” Art Bulletin 59.4, 623–26.
White 1977–78
D. White, “Wadi Bel Gadir Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene,” LS 9, 31–41.
White 1978–79
D. White, “Excavations in the Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene. Sixth Preliminary Report,” LA 15-16, 153–85.
White 1981
D. White, “Cyrene’s Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone: A Summary of a Decade of Excavation,” AJA 85, 13–30.
White 1984
D. White, The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, Final Reports I: Background and Introduction to the Excavations. Philadelphia.
White 1985
D. White, “Cyrene’s Suburban Expansion South of Its Ramparts,” Cyrenaica in Antiquity, ed. G. Barker, J. Lloyd, and J. Reynolds, 105–20. Society for Libyan Studies Occasional Papers 1, BAR International Series 236. Oxford.
White 1987
D. White, “Demeter Libyssa, Her Cyrenean Cult in Light of the Recent Excavations,” QAL 12, 67–84.
White 1989
D. White, “The Pennsylvania University Museum’s Demeter and Persephone Project at Cyrene: A Final Progress Report?,” LS 20, 71–75.
White 1990
D. White, “Editor’s Preface” in Warden et al. 1990, xxvi–xxx.
White et al. 1992
D. White, J. Uhlenbrock, G. Schaus, P. Warden, T.V. Buttrey, S. Kane, and J. Monge, “Gifts to the Goddesses: Cyrene’s Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone,” Expedition 34, nos. 1–2.
White 1993
D. White, The Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene, Libya, Final Reports V: The Site’s First Six Hundred Years of Architectural Development. Philadelphia.
White 1996
D. White, “Fresh Reverberations from Cyrene’s Later Antique Earthquakes,” in Studi Miscellanei: Scritti di Antichità in Onore di Sandro Stucchi, 317–25. Dipartimento di scienze storiche archeologiche e antropologiche dell’antichità Università di Roma La Sapienza 29.
White 1998
D. White and G.R.H. Wright, “Static versus Reactive Defense: An In-Progress Case Study of the Apollonia and Cyrene Fortifications,” Atti del convegno internazionale di studi, Macerata, 18–20 Maggio 1995, 579–612. Macerata.
White and Wright 1998
D. White and G.R.H. Wright, “Apollonia’s East Fort and the Strategic Deployment of Cut-Down Bedrock for Defensive Walls,” LS 29, 3–33.
White 1999a
D. White, “Le sanctuaire extra-muros de Déméter et Perséphone à Cyrène: sa situation dans l’architecture sacée grecque,” in Cités, ports et campagnes de la Cyrénaïque gréco-romaine, 117–23. Karthago: Revue d’archéologie méditerranéenne 24. Paris.
White 1999b
D. White, “The Eschatological Connections between Lead and Ropes as Reflected in a Roman Imperial Coffin in Philadelphia,” IEJ 49, 66–91.
White et al. 2002
D. White, with R. Gardner, L. Hulin, et al., Marsa Matruh I: The Excavation and II: The Objects. Philadelphia.
White and Wright 2005
D. White and G.R.H. Wright, “Siegecraft and Spoliation, c. 500 BC: A Tale of Two Cities,” LS, 21–42.
White 2006
D. White, “Foreign Schrecklichkeit and Homegrown Iconoclasm: Two Faces of Communal Violence at Cyrene,” in Cirenaica: studi, scavi e scoperte: Atti del X Convegno di Archeologia Cirenaica, Chieti, 24–26 Novembre 2003, Pt. 1: Nuovi dati da città e territorio, 191–204. BAR International Series 1488.
White 2007
D. White, “The Multiple Stages in the Placement and Usage of Votives in Cyrene’s Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone,” in Questions de Religion Cyrénéenne: Actes du Colloque de Dijon, 21–23 Mars 2002, 205–84. Karthago: Revue d’archéologie méditerranéenne 27. Paris.
White 2008
D. White, “Demeter Libyssa II: Another Model for Colonial Cultic Transference,” in Demetra. La divinità, i santuari, il culto, la leggenda: Atti del I Congresso Internazionale, Enna, 1-4 luglio 2004, 161–66. Pisa.
White 2009
D. White, “The Early Church’s Impact on Demeter’s Cult at Syracuse and Cyrene or How Did the Laganello Head Lose Its Nose?,” Mare Internum I, 63–70.
Wiegand 1904
T. Wiegand, Priene, Ergebnisse der Ausgrabungen und Untersuchungen in de Jahren 1895–1895. Berlin.
Acknowledgments
Turning finally to all who have helped to realize this book, the years between the Pennsylvania Expedition’s final 1981 study season and our brief return in 2004 were marked by a progressive drying up of communications between our Libyan colleagues and ourselves, broken only when we met by chance at academic conferences in England, France, and Italy. In this regard, I wish to express to all our Libyan and European colleagues the University of Pennsylvania Museum’s keen disappointment that U.S. State Department regulations prohibited the organization of an archaeology conference which could include Libyan participants at the University of Pennsylvania or at some other U.S.-based venue during these years.
Conversely, it was greatly encouraging when Susan Kane and I were permitted at last to return as CAP (Cyrenaican Archaeological Project) representatives, and in my own case, on three additional occasions as a tour lecturer to meet up again with so many of our old friends and collaborators in the field. Fadul Ali Mohamad, Abdulgadr al-Muzeini, Ramadan Kwader, Mohamad Bu Sherit, Fadlallah Abdulsalam, Abdul Hamid Abdussaid, and Mohamad Aghilla Bulkassim in particular were all extremely generous in their greetings as well as in their repeated expressions of hope for a rapid resumption of the American mission’s work in Cyrene. It came as a special privilege in 2004 to visit Breyik Attiyah el-Jiteily in his home. This initial trip also enabled me to meet Dr. Giuma Anag for the first time. Since then, his support for CAP has been unswerving, and I am pleased to have this opportunity to thank him and his predecessor as President of the Department of Antiquities, Dr. Ali Khadouri, for their on-going assistance.
At the same time, it is painful to have to note how the intervening years have coincided with the passing of so many friends and colleagues. Some in their prime, others only after a fullness of years, all are sorely missed, and certainly none forgotten. I think in particular of Lidiano Bacchielli, François Chamoux, Claudio Frigerio, John Lloyd, Sandro Stucchi, and Jim Thorn. On a happier note I would like to express special thanks to Nicola Bonacasa, Serenella Ensoli, Emanuela Fabbricotti, Andrè Laronde, and Mario Luni for their many years of collegial support and assistance.
The Cyrene project has overlapped with the University of Pennsylvania Museum directorships of Froelich Rainey, James Pritchard, Martin Biddle, Robert Dyson, Jeremy Sabloff, Richard Leventhal, and now, Richard Hodges; and before that when the project was initially sponsored by the University of Michigan’s Kelsey Museum of Ancient and Medieval Archaeology, under the directorships of George Forsythe and Theodore Buttrey. While Ted Buttrey, who has contributed the