38 ARCHAEOLOGY 



conducted excavations in Italy as well as in his chosen 

 province. His works include "Les Monuments antiques 

 de 1'Algerie" (2 vols., 1901); "Atlas archeologique de 

 1'Algerie" (1911); "Histoire ancienne de 1'Afrique du 

 Nord" (vol. i, 1913; to be complete in six volumes). 

 His courses in recent years have been devoted to Carthage 

 and the Punic wars. The professorship of Egyptology 

 was long held by MASPERO, by whose recent death the 

 Faculty has lost one of its most distinguished members. 

 His work in Paris will no doubt be ably continued by 

 his successor, when appointed. 



In the Ecole des Hautes Etudes, Section des Sciences 

 historiques et philologiques, several courses of interest 

 to students of archaeology are offered. Among the 

 Directeurs d 'Etudes in the section are: Bernard 

 HAUSSOULLIER, for Greek Epigraphy and Archaeology, 

 well known as one of the investigators of the temple 

 at Didyma (cf. "Didymes: Fouilles de 1895 et de 1896," 

 in collaboration with E. Pontremoli, 1904), and as one 

 of the authors of the "Recueil des inscriptions juridiques 

 grecques" (2 vols., 1891-1904). His courses are devoted 

 to the study of Greek history and legal antiquities, with 

 reference especially to the evidence of inscriptions and 

 the papyri. Antoine HERON DE VILLEFOSSE, for Latin 

 Epigraphy and Roman Archaeology, Curator of Greek and 

 Roman Antiquities in the Louvre, author of a "Rapport 

 sur une mission archeologique en Algerie" (1875), "Le 

 tresor de B osco Reale " ( 1 899) , and numerous articles. He 

 offers one course in inscriptions relating to the officials 

 of the "tres Galliae." In this school, also, CLERMONT- 

 GANNEAU offers a course in the antiquities of Palestine, 

 Phoenicia, and Syria, and another in Jewish archae- 

 ology; some work in Egyptology is given under the 

 direction of Paul GUIYESSE and Alexandre MORET; and 

 studies in Assyrian Philology and Archaeology are in charge 



