Abstract
MR. F. W. HASLUCK, the assistant-director of the British School at Athens, is an archæologist whose knowledge of the bypaths of travel in the Levant is extensive and peculiar. His work, too, has lain among the bypaths of antiquity rather than on its main routes. One of the pleasures of the “Annual of the British School at Athens” for some years past has been the reading of the assistant-director's articles on Prankish Greece and the Ægean Isles in mediaeval days. Mr. Hasluck has devoted most of his time to the lands still under Turkish sway, and the present book is a description of what is known of a certain district of Bithynia, of which the centre was the ancient and famous city of Cyzicus.
Cyzicus: Being some Account of the History and Antiquities of that City and of the District Adjacent.
By F. W. Hasluck. (Cambridge Archæological and Ethnological Series.) Pp. xii + 326; sketch maps. (Cambridge: University Press, 1910.) Price 10s. net.
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HALL, H. Cyzicus: Being some Account of the History and Antiquities of that City and of the District Adjacent . Nature 86, 138–139 (1911). https://doi.org/10.1038/086138a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/086138a0