52 HANDBOOK OF LEARNED SOCIETIES 



Preliminary report of an archaeological journey made through Asia 

 Minor during the summer of 1884, by J. R. S. Sterrett. 1885. 8. 



Price: 250. The complete report forms v. 2 of the Papers of the school, 



as noted above. 



Distribution. See Archaeological institute of America. 



Research funds, etc. 2 fellowships in Greek archaeology, $600 each, 

 one granted by the Institute, the other by the Managing Committee, are 

 awarded annually on competitive examination. (For places of exami- 

 nation, etc., v. supra Archaeological institute of America.) The Car- 

 negie Institution of Washington has recently made to the school, for five 

 years, a grant of $1,500 a year in connection with excavation at Corinth 

 and for exploration and a grant of $1,000 a year for a research fellow- 

 ship in architecture. 



AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES IN ROME. 



Address. 5 Via Vicenza, Rome, Italy. Director : Richard Norton. Com- 

 munications should be sent to the Chairman of the Managing Commit- 

 tee: A. F. West, Princeton University, Princeton, N. J. 



History. Founded in 1895 by the Archaeological Institute of America. 

 In charge of a self-perpetuating Managing Committee and supported 

 by the cooperation of the corporations and alumni of a considerable 

 number of American universities and colleges and by private contribu- 

 tions. The title to its permanent fund, and other property is vested 

 in an incorporated Board of Trustees. 



Ref.: American school of classical studies in Rome, by W. G. Hale. (In 



Harvard graduates' magazine, v. 4, 1895/96, p. 569-577.) 



Object. To promote the study of classical literature in its bearing upon antiquities 

 and history; of classical, Etruscan and Italic art and archaeology, including 

 topography, palaeography and epigraphy ; and of the art and archaeology of 

 the early Christian, the mediaeval, and the Renaissance periods within the 

 boundaries of Italy. 



Publications. 



Annual reports and papers are published in the American journal of 



archaeology, 2d ser. 

 SUPPLEMENTARY PAPERS . . . v. i. New York, London, 1905. 4. 



Pub. for the Archaeological institute of America by the Macmillan co. 

 Research funds, etc. Two fellowships in classical archaeology of $600 

 each, one granted by the Institute, the other by the Managing Com- 

 mittee of the school, are awarded annually on competitive examina- 

 tion. A fellowship in Christian archaeology of $600, maintained by 

 subscriptions from various institutions, is offered irregularly. (For 

 places of examinations, etc., see Archaeological institute of America.) 



