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Emilie Haspels was the daughter of George Frans Haspels. Her 1936 book Attic Black Figured-Lekythoi, based on her work at the University of Utrecht, has remained the standard on lekythoi since its publication. Haspels was the first to attribute the black-figured lekythoi produced in Athens between ca. 560 and 470 B.C., mostly for graves, to specific painters and workshops.[1]
La cité de Midas : céramique et trouvailles diverses, Paris 1951
She created many plaster casts that were sent back to Amsterdam and are in the collection of the Allard Pierson Museum
Her index card file of markings at Midas City
Publications
Attic black-figured lekythoi, Paris, 1936.
La cité de Midas : céramique et trouvailles diverses, Paris 1951
The highlands of Phrygia : sites and monuments, 2 vols, Princeton 1971
A Misleading Lekythos in the Villa Giulia Museum (Talanta, 1973)
I am the last of the travelers : Midas city excavations and surveys in the highlands of Phrygia, ed. Dietrich Berndt ; contributions by Halet Çambel. İstanbul, Arkeoloji ve Sanat Yayınları, 2009.[3]
Jaap M. Hemelrijk, "In memoriam Prof. Dr. CHE Haspels, September 15, 1894 - December 25, 1980", Bulletin antieke beschaving. Annual Papers on Classical Archaeology56:1-2, 1981
Jaap M. Hemelrijk, "Licht in der Dunkelheit und eine Nadel im Heuhaufen. Die niederländische Archäologin CH Emilie Haspels (1894-1980) führte ein abenteuerliches Leben im Dienste der Wissenschaft", Antike Welt37:1:80-82, 2006