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| Two non-joining fragments preserve parts of rim and upper bowl. Slightly bulging wall; heavy rolled rim; oval cutout in wall for baby's legs. Glazed are: rim inside and out; a band below rim, a band at ... 1937 ... B.C.).
Cf. Hesperia 17 (1948), pl. 65:2-3 (6th c. |
Foot missing.
Offset neck and echinoid mouth; raised ridge at junction of neck and wall; round handles. Neck reserved. Added red: band at level of lower attachment of handles.
For a later version, see ... 575-550 B.C ... For a later version, see P 1358 G 6:3-U Hesperia, XV, 1946, pl. 66, 268, with an ivy wreath round the neck. A patterned example from the Agora forms a link between the plain and the figured; it has black-figured lotuses on the neck and a stout echinus foot; P 18348 A 17:2 Hesperia, XVII, 1948, pl. 65, 1; Archaeology, I, 1948, pp. 13-20. |
| Inscribed fragments.
Confiscated property of Alcibiades.
"POLETAI" record.
Fragment ΣΤ 604 from upper right corner of inscribed block.
Full thickness of block preserved, but large flakes broken from surface ... (ΣΤ 604) 11 May 1932
a) (Κ 1350) 16 July 1947
b) (Κ 22) 22 January 1934
c) (ΘΘ 5) 18 December 1936
c) (ΙΙ 242b) March 1938
d) (ΘΘ 30) 30 December 1936
d) (ΘΘ 44) 17 January 1937
d) )ΙΙ 133) 7-8 March 1938 ... |
Wall fragment. Glaze dull and misfired reddish here and there on inside and outside; slightly abraded. Max. dim. 0.107. H. A. Thompson, Hesperia 17, 1948, pl. 67:4; Matheson, Polygnotos, p. 354, cat. no ... Ca. 440 B.C ... Thompson, Hesperia 17, 1948, pl. 67:4; Matheson, Polygnotos, p. 354, cat. no. ... Cristofani, Materiali per servire alla storia del vaso François [Bollettino d'Arte, Serie Speciale 1], Rome, 1980, fig. 65: the figure of Theseus) and in the slaying of the Minotaur on the cup in Munich by Archikles and Glaukytes, 2243 (ABV 163, 2; Paralip. 68, 2; Addenda 47), also on a late-6th-century cup in Taranto by the Edinburgh Painter (ABV 476, 3): there the lyre is hanging up. On Bologna 177, a stamnos by the Agrigento Painter (ARV2 577, 53; Philippaki, Stamnos, pl. 48:3, side A only), Theseus and the Minotaur appear on the obverse, and a man offering a lyre to a youth, accompanied by a male, appears on the reverse, but it is far from certain that the two scenes are connected (Beazley separates his description with a period, not a semicolon, indicating that he considered the two unrelated; see ARV2 p. xlvi). |
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