[3] Then she continued her studies at the University of St. Andrews under Terence Mitford with a scholarship from the British Council, specializing in Greek and Latin epigraphy.
In 1976 she earned her doctorate degree from the University of Göteborg, with her thesis titled Prosopography of Ptolemaic Cyprus.
[4] As a student she excavated with Ioannis Threpsiades at Kerameikos and the Pnyx in Athens and with Kazimierz Michałowski at Palmyra in Syria.
[5] She worked at the Department of Antiquities from 1960 until 1989, retiring as an Archaeological Officer A, in her 29 years working with the Department, she excavated at the House of Dionysos in Paphos with Kyriakos Nicolaou, at the ‘Commissariato’ of Limassol, the Eastern necropolis of Amathous and the locality Phoinikas of Evrychou.
[10] She was the correspondent for Cyprus for the Association Internationale pour l'Étude de la Mosaique Antique (AIEMA).