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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
The publication in this journal of a hoard of metalwork reported to have come from the region of Sakçagözü omitted any reference to the original publication of this material by Engin Özgen in 1985. The opportunity has now been taken to publish photographs of the two copper (?alloy) figurines and their gold and silver adornments, one in the Adana Museum and the other in Gaziantep Museum (PI. XV) and, because the original publication is out of print, to provide a detailed description of the Adana piece. We are grateful to the Directors of the two museums Bey İsmet İpek (Adana) and Bey Rifat Ergeç (Gaziantep) for facilitating this study and to Tuğrul Čakar for the photographs.
No new information concerning the discovery and dispersal of the metalwork has come to light. It is the conviction of the authors that the close stylistic and technical resemblance between the two figurines and the addition to both of gold foil and silver torques greatly increases the probability that, firstly, the pieces are genuine antiquities and, secondly, that all of the objects were found together in a single hoard. No new evidence has emerged to contradict our earlier, independently deduced suggestion of an early second millennium date.
1 Summers, G. D., AS XLI (1991) 173–95Google Scholar.
2 Özgen, Engin, “Two Bronze Near Eastern Figurines from Southeastern Anatolia”, Hacettepe Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Dergisi III. (1985) 173–79Google Scholar. A colour photo-graph of the Gaziantep figurine was published by İlhan Temizsoy in the Gaziantep Museum guide book (1988).
3 Özgen, , HÜEFD III: 177Google Scholar; Summers, , AS XLI 176, 194Google Scholar.