Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-rkxrd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-18T03:56:32.527Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Some West Anatolian Vases at Cambridge

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2013

Extract

Unstratified finds from prehistoric sites are not without value, provided that something is known of their place of origin. Lacking a pedigree, they still have, as it were, a passport; and any of them that belongs to a civilisation inadequately represented in this country deserves a welcome. I have, therefore, taken this opportunity of introducing a group of early West Anatolian vases which has for many years been in the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge; the moment is appropriate, for, had they been published sooner, when their home was more unfamiliar to us than it is now, they would have been less informing; while to delay their presentation might involve their eclipse by rivals with fuller credentials.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 1937

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 166 note 1 Professor Myres has examined these vases and discussed them with me, and their publication is a small token of my gratitude.

page 166 note 2 Professor Wace has kindly supplied information on this point, as well as investigating the crucible, 26.8; his comments will be found on p. 170.

page 166 note 3 Hutchinson, , in Iraq II pp. 213, 214.Google Scholar

page 167 note 1 I am indebted to Mr. Christopher Hawkes for shewing me the implements in the British Museum from Anatolian sites.

page 168 note 1 Thermi pp. 82, 85.

page 168 note 2 Thermi pp. 210–11.

page 168 note 3 See PFK p. 132, where another find from Sardes is mentioned.

page 168 note 4 Thermi p. 85.

page 168 note 5 For Alişar, see OIP XXVIII p. 164, from which one might infer that ribs were made there till the end of Alişar I in the twenty-fourth century. For Kusura see Archaeologia LXXXVII pp. 235–6.

page 168 note 6 Cf. PFK p. 121.

page 169 note 1 Thermi p. 84. The incised collar-necked jar found with two stirrup-vases in a grave near Malduvan must be a survival, or, since it is not hand-made, archaistic. It is published in Jahreshefte XV, Supplement, pp. 49, 50 and 53, fig. 46.

page 169 note 2 BM Cat. I, 1, pl. II, upper half.

page 169 note 3 Contrast SS 2242.

page 169 note 4 Archaeologia LXXXVI, pl. VII, 14.

page 170 note 1 E.g. Bosanquet and Dawkins, The Unpublished Objects from the Palaikastro Excavations, pl. II, d and p.8.

page 170 note 2 JHS LII p. 5.

page 171 note 1 See Thermi p. 210; for the Helladic wares in Troy V, see AJA XLI p. 595.

page 171 note 2 Archaeologia LXXXVI p. 4; LXXXVII pp. 229, 237.

page 171 note 3 OIP XXX pp. 432–3.