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Vases recently acquired by the British Museum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

This paper is in continuation of one which appeared in Vol. xviii, of the Journal (1898). It deals with the more interesting of the hitherto unpublished black-figured vases acquired by the British Museum during the last twelve years, to which are added two of later date. I hope in a future paper to publish on similar lines some of the red-figured vases and white lekythi acquired subsequently to the issue of the third volume of the Vase Catalogue in 1896.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1911

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References

1 See for these J. H. S. xxii. pp. 29 ff.; Walters, , Ancient Pottery, i. pp. 292 ffGoogle Scholar.

2 See generally Ath. Mitth. xv. pp. 318 ff., xviii, pp. 46 ff.

3 Jahrbuch d. arch. Inst. xviii, pp. 124 ff.

4 Aus Ion. u. Ital. Nekrop. p. 116.

5 Antike Vasen von d. Akrop. zu Athen, i. p. 51, Nos. 472 ff.

6 Tyrrhen. Amphoren, p. 146.

7 Cf. Collignon and Couve, Cat. des Vases d'Athènes, No. 608 (Fig. 4 in Nilsson's article); Graef, op. cit. Nos. 526–534.

8 Nilsson, op. cit. p. 125.

9 The absence of ground-ornaments (with this exception) is curious, and taken in conjunction with the appearance of Hermes, seems to suggest a comparatively late date for this example. On the other vases they are almost invariably present.

10 Cf. Thiersch, , Tyrrhen. Amph. p. 75Google Scholar, for similar patterns.

11 In the Museum collection B 79 is the nearest parallel.

12 See Studniczka, in Jahrbuch d. arch. Inst. xix. (1904), pp. 1Google Scholar ff.

13 A good R. F. example is Munich 369 =Furtwaengler and Reichhold, Gr. Vasen, i. Pl. XXIV.

14 Auserl. Vasenb. ii. Pl CXLT. Figs. 1, 2. Cf. also Louvre F 117. The former is interpreted by M. Reinach as the ‘initiation of Herakles.’

15 Cf. the Louvre vase already cited, and Furtwaengler, in Roscher's, Lexicon, i. p. 2216Google Scholar.

16 Röm. Mitth. iii. p. 108.

17 J.H.S., i. Pl VII.

18 Rayet and Collignon, Hist. de la Céram. Grecque. Pl. VII.

19 Auserl. Vasenb. iv. Pl. CCXLII. 1.

20 See generally his article in Roscher's, Lexikon, s.v. Midas, ii. 2954 ffGoogle Scholar. The story is also discussed by K., in Zeitschr. d. Morgenländ. Gcsellsch. xl. p. 556Google Scholar; Frazer, , Pausanias, ii. p. 74Google Scholar; Cook, in J.H.S., xiv. pp. 87Google Scholar ff.

21 Pausanias (i. 4. 5) places the spring at Aneyra. See Frazer, 's note. Philostratus also alludes twice to the story (Imag. i. 22Google Scholar and Vit. Apoll, vi. 27), placing the scene in Phrygia. Kuhnert suggests that there has been a confusion between Βρύγες (i.e. Macedonians) and Φρύγες

22 I owe the suggestion to Dr. M. R. James.

23 See Jewish Encyclopaedia, ii. p. 218.

24 See Jahrbuch d. arch. Inst. ii. p. 112.

25 Bull, dell' Inst. 1869, p. 59, No. 31.

26 Jahrbuch d. arch. Inst. i. pp. 192 ff.

27 Six, in Gaz. Arch. 1889, pp. 193 ff.Google Scholar, 281 ff.; Walters, , Ancient Pottery, i. pp. 393 ffGoogle Scholar.

28 The Latin names for the different parts of the lyre were derived from a comparison with the loom (see Smith, , Dict. Ant. ii. p. 768)Google Scholar.

29 See on the subject Blümner, , Technologie, i. pp. 120 ff.Google Scholar; Smith, Dict. Ant. art. Tela; Hooper, L., Handloom Weaving (Hogg, 1910)Google Scholar.

30 Gräber der Hellenen, Pl. XXXIII, reproduced in Baumeister, iii. p. 1715, Fig. 1796.

31 See Collignon, and Couve, , Cat. du Musée d' Athènes, Nos. 1341–1352, 1583, 18871920Google Scholar.

32 Ath. Mitth. xxiv. (1899), p. 67.

33 Ἐφ. Ἀρχ. 1883, p. 176.

34 Cf. B. M. Cat. of Vases, iv. F 1 ff.

35 Rayet, and Collignon, , Hist, de la Céram. Grecque, p. 291Google Scholar.

36 Frazer, , Pausanias, ii. pp. 391 ff.Google Scholar; Daremberg and Saglio, iii. pt. 2, pp. 909 ff. (s.v. Lampadedromia). See also Gardiner, , Athletic-Sports and Festivals, pp. 292, 461Google Scholar; Jahrb. vii. p. 149; Revue de Philol. xxiii. (1899), p. 112.

37 The reading is doubtful, but the editors have restored ἱππέων from the analogy of other formulae in this inscription. It is not definitely stated that this torch-race was equestrian, but it is highly probable.

38 A torch-race was instituted at Neapolis by Diotimos about 433 B.C., but it is not stated to have been equestrian (Lycophron, Cass. 732, with Tzetzes' note).