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A Rediscovered Caeretan Hydria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

Through the kind permission of Mr. H. B. Walters, I am enabled to publish a Caeretan hydria, whose whereabouts has for many years been unknown and of which the only previous illustration is the drawing in Endt, Beiträge zur Ionischen Vasenmalerei, figs. 7, 8. This is the hydria with a young man in a chariot, pursued by a griffin, on the front, and two pairs of satyr and maenad, on the back: it is now in the British Museum, and bears the inventory number 1923, 4–19, 1. Before proceeding with a more detailed description of the vase, I give a list of the group, that of Dümmler (Röm. Mitt. iii, p. 166 f.), to which nos. 15–18 were added by Pottier (B.C.H. 1892, p. 254 ff.), no. 19 by Endt (op. cit., p. 1), no. 20 by Loeschcke (Ath. Mitt. xix, p. 516, n. 1.), no. 21 by Furtwängler in the text to F.R. Pl. 51. The bibliography is only intended to give the handiest illustrations: for a full bibliography and an admirable account of the group as a whole, see E. R. Price, East Greek Pottery (C.V.A. Classification, 13).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1928

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References

page 197 note 1 It has been thought advisable to omit certain details on Pl. XII.

page 202 note 1 See list by Wrede, , Ath. Mitt. 1924, p. 214.Google Scholar They are in oriental costume. On the late fifth-centuary mirror-back in New York (Richter, , Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Bronzes in New York, p. 61Google Scholar, No. 94), however, and on the early fifth-centuary gem in the Lewes House Collection (Beazley, , Lewes House Gems, p. 24Google Scholar, No. 29, Pl. 2) the Arimasp is naked.