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Dumbarton Oaks began to fund archaeology in Central and South America in the mid-1990s. In 2005, Dumbarton Oaks inaugurated a new gardeners' court and a 44,500-square-foot (4,130 m 2 ) library, both designed by Robert Venturi (1925–2018) of the Philadelphia architectural firm of Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates.
The Dumbarton Oaks Conference, or, more formally, the Washington Conversations on International Peace and Security Organization, was an international conference at which proposals for the establishment of a "general international organization", which was to become the United Nations, were formulated and negotiated.
John Myres - A catalogue of the Cyprus museum, with a chronicle of excavations undertaken since the British occupation, and introductory notes on Cypriote archaeology. Ernest-Théodore Hamy - article on the Dumbarton Oaks birthing figure. [2]
Museum Antalya, Sion treasure 01 Byzantine collections of Dumbarton OaksDSCF7901 silver. The Sion Treasure (also known as the Kumluca treasure) is a group of liturgical objects and church furnishings found in Kumluca, Turkey in 1963. [1]
Below are notable events in archaeology that occurred in 1906 ... Hamy in the Journal de la Société des Américanistes about the Dumbarton Oaks birthing ...
Archaeology. 61 (3). New York: Archaeological Institute of America: 36– 41. ISSN 0003-8113. OCLC 1481828. Archived from the original (online edition) on 2011-01-11 the Tlazolteotl idol, like the crystal skulls, is a nineteenth-century fake. Walsh, Jane MacLaren (2008b).
Dumbarton Oaks Papers (DOP) is an academic journal founded in 1941 under the auspices of the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection for the publication of articles relating to Byzantine society and culture from the 4th to 15th century in the Roman Empire as well as its neighboring and successor states.
Turtle pendant, Playa de Venado, 500-1300 CE, shell, Dumbarton Oaks Museum, Washington, DC. Gran Coclé is an archaeological culture area of the so-called Intermediate Area in pre-Columbian Central America. The area largely coincides with the modern-day Panamanian province of Coclé, and consisted of a number of identifiable native cultures.