This second volume, published in 1905, focuses on inscriptions, official and private, from Athens.The second volume of E. S. Roberts work, written with E. A. Gardner and published in 1905, focuses on the inscriptions found in Attica, and especially Athens. Each is given in transcription, with suggested restorations and the reproduction of unusual characters where the value is not certain, and with full explanatory notes.The second volume of E. S. Roberts work, written with E. A. Gardner and published in 1905, focuses on the inscriptions found in Attica, and especially Athens. Each is given in transcription, with suggested restorations and the reproduction of unusual characters where the value is not certain, and with full explanatory notes.The second volume of E. S. Robert's Introduction to Greek Epigraphy, written with E. A. Gardner and published in 1905, continued the important and innovative work of the first volume of 1887. The focus is on the inscriptions found in Attica, and especially Athens: they are presented in categories such as decrees of the city-state, foreign affairs, financial, military and naval affairs, administrative regulations, lists of officials, and dedicatory and funerary inscriptions. Each is given in transcription, with suggested restorations and the reproduction of unusual characters where the value is not certain, and with full explanatory notes.Preface; Introduction; List of abbreviations; Errata; Attica: 1. Decrees of the senate and people; 2. Decrees and letters of foreign states and of the Amphictyonic Council; 3. Decrees of tribes, demes, cleruchs, clans, phratriae, guilds and other associations; 4. Imperial ordinances, laws, edicts and other documents; 5. Finance; 6. Administration of temples, regulations for ritual, oracles, edicts of priests, foundation of a sanctuary, erections of a taurobolic altar; 7. Official lists of various kinds; 8. Dedications, public and private, including agonistic and choragic dedications, and inscripl“K