Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T21:44:16.804Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

4 - A Family Affair

The Household Use of Attic lekythoi*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 July 2022

J. A. Baird
Affiliation:
Birkbeck College, University of London
April Pudsey
Affiliation:
Manchester Metropolitan University
Get access

Summary

The Classical house can be understood also as a set of interactions between people, objects and valuable commodities that existed within and extended beyond the physical and temporal confines of the house. This chapter concerns ceramic oil jars, lekythoi, that date to the early 5th century BCE. It is argued that the small black-figured lekythoi, which were prolifically produced and widely traded during this time, may have held olive oil, not just perfume. The materiality of these pots and archaeological evidence from settlements, graves and other find-spots suggest that lekythoi could have functioned as oil pitchers to serve small portions of olive oil, perhaps of family production. Vase iconography indicates that such lekythoi were objects within easy reach, to be used on diverse occasions, such as dining, ritual and commercial activities. The offering of lekythoi in burials, irrespective of the presence of contents, could have alluded to the storage of olive oil in the household of the deceased and communicated a powerful message about a family’s claims to status, real or fictitious.

Type
Chapter
Information
Housing in the Ancient Mediterranean World
Material and Textual Approaches
, pp. 133 - 180
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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

Adrimi-Sismani, V. et al. (2004). Αγώνες και Αθλήματα στην Αρχαία Θεσσαλία. Athens.Google Scholar
Algrain, I. (2015). “A l’ombre des jeunes filles en fleur” – Women and flowers on Attic pottery. In Lang-Auinger, C. and Trinkl, E., eds., Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, Österreich, Beiheft 2: ΦϒТА ΚΑΙ ΖΩΙΑ. Pflanzen und Tiere auf griechischen Vasen. Vienna: Verlag der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 4754.Google Scholar
Algrain, I., Brisart, T. and Jubier-Galinier, C. (2008). Les vases à parfum à Athènes aux époques archaïque et Classique. In Verbanck-Piérard, A., Massar, N. and Frére, D., eds., Parfums de l’Antiquité. La rose et l’encens en Méditerranée. Mariemont: Musée royal de Mariemont, 145–64.Google Scholar
Amouretti, M.-C. (1986). Le pain et l’huile de la Grèce antique. De l’araire au moulin. Paris: Besançon.Google Scholar
Arrington, N. T. (2014). Fallen vessels and risen spirits: conveying the presence of the dead on white-ground lekythoi. In Oakley, J. H., ed., Athenian Potters and Painters III. Oxford and Philadelphia: Oxbow, 110.Google Scholar
Arrington, N. T. (2015). Ashes, Images, and Memories: The Presence of the War Dead in Fifth-Century Athens. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Arrington, N. T. (2018). Touch and remembrance in Greek funerary art. The Art Bulletin 100, 727.Google Scholar
Ault, B. A. and Nevett, L. C. (1999). Digging houses: archaeologies of Classical and Hellenistic Greek domestic assemblages. In Allison, P. M., ed., The Archaeology of Household Activities. London and New York: Routledge, 4356.Google Scholar
Badinou, P. (2003). La laine et le parfum. Épinetra et alabastres, forme, iconographie et fonction. Recherche de céramique attique féminine. Leuven and Dudley, MA: Peeters.Google Scholar
Batziou-Efstathiou, A. and Triantafyllopoulou, P. (2009). Επιφανειακές Έρευνες στο «Σωρό», Αρχαιολογικό Έργο Θεσσαλίας και Στερεάς Ελλάδας 2, 257–67.Google Scholar
Baziotopoulou-Valavani, E. (2000). From tomb 1099. In Palarma, L. and Stampolidis, N. C., eds., Athens: The City beneath the City: Antiquities from the Metropolitan Railway Excavations. New York and London: Harry N. Abrams, 304–12.Google Scholar
Beazley, J. D. (1938). Attic White Lekythoi. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Beazley, J. D. (1971). Paralipomena: Additions to Attic Black-Figure Vase-Painters and to Attic Red-Figure Vase-Painters. Oxford: Clarendon.Google Scholar
Bender, H. H. (1934). Lekythos: Archäologische, sprachliche und religionsgeschichtliche Untersuchungen by L. J. Elferink. American Journal of Archaeology 38, 614–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bentz, M. (1998). Panathenäische Preisamphoren. Eine athenische Vasengattung und ihre Funktion vom 6.–4. Jahrhundert v. Chr. Basel: Vereinigung der Freunde antiker Kunst.Google Scholar
Bentz, M. (2003). Objet d’usage ou objet de prestige? Les vases dans l’habitat. In Rouillard, P. and Verbanck-Piérand, A., eds., Le vase grec et ses destins. Munich: Biering & Brinkmann, 4548.Google Scholar
Best, J. (2015). Roadside assistance: religious spaces and personal experience in Athens. In Miles, M., ed., Autopsy in Athens: Recent Archaeological Research on Athens and Attica. Oxford: Oxbow, 100107.Google Scholar
Biers, W. R., Gerhardt, K. O. and Braniff, R. A. (1994). Lost Scents: Investigations of Corinthian ‘Plastic’ Vases by Gas Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry. MASCA Research Papers in Science and Archaeology 11. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.Google Scholar
Biers, W. R., Gerhardt, K. O. and Braniff, R. A. (1995). Scientific investigations of Corinthian ‘plastic’ vases. American Journal of Archaeology 99, 320.Google Scholar
Biers, W. R., Searles, S. and Gerhardt, K. O. (1988). Non-destructive extraction studies of Corinthian plastic vases: methods and problems. A preliminary report. In Christiansen, J. and Melander, T., eds., Proceedings of the 3rd Symposium on Ancient Greek and Related Pottery. Copenhagen August 31–September 4 1987. Copenhagen: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, 3350.Google Scholar
Blome, P. (1999). Antikenmuseum Basel und Sammlung Ludwig. Basel Museum of Ancient Art and Ludwig Collection. Geneva and Zurich: Schweizerisches Institut für Kunstwissenschaft.Google Scholar
Blomme, A., Degryse, P., Dotsika, E., Ignatiadou, D., Longinelli, A. and Silvestri, A. (2017). Provenance of polychrome and colourless 8th–4th century BC glass from Pieria, Greece: a chemical and isotopic approach. Journal of Archaeological Science 78, 134–46.Google Scholar
Boardman, J. (1958–59). Old Smyrna: the Attic pottery. Annual of the British School at Athens 53–54, 152–81.Google Scholar
Boardman, J. (1974). Athenian Black Figure Vases: A Handbook. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Boardman, J. (1977). The olive in the Mediterranean: its culture and use. In Hutchinson, J. B., Clark, G., Jope, E. M. and Riley, R., eds., The Early History of Agriculture: A Joint Symposium of the Royal Society and the British Academy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 187–96.Google Scholar
Boardman, J. (1979). The Athenian pottery trade. Expedition 21, 3339.Google Scholar
Bodiou, L. and Mehl, V. (2008) Sociologie des odeurs en pays grec. In Bodiou, L., Frère, D. and Mehl, V., eds., Parfums et odeurs dans l’Antiquité. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 141–63.Google Scholar
Bosanquet, R. C. (1896). On a group of early Attic lekythoi. Journal of Hellenic Studies 16, 164–77.Google Scholar
Bosanquet, R. C. (1899). Some early funeral lekythoi. Journal of Hellenic Studies 19, 169–84.Google Scholar
Boulter, C. (1953). Pottery of the mid-fifth century from a well in the Athenian Agora. Hesperia 22, 59115.Google Scholar
Boulter, C. (1963) Graves in Lenormant Street, Athens. Hesperia 32, 113–37.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. (1992). The Logic of Practice, 2nd ed. Cambridge: Polity.Google Scholar
Brendle, R. (2018). Athenian use of black-figure lekythoi in fifth-century burials. Archäologischer Anzeiger 2018(1), 121–38.Google Scholar
Bresson, A. and Rendall, S. (2016). The Making of the Ancient Greek Economy: Institutions, Markets, and Growth in the City-States, trans. S. Rendall. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Brun, J.-P. (2000). The production of perfumes in antiquity: the cases of Delos and Paestum. American Journal of Archaeology 104, 277308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brun, J.-P. (2008). Une parfumerie à Délos à la fin de l’époque hellénistique. In Verbanck-Piérard, A., Massar, N. and Frére, D., eds., Parfums de l’Antiquité. La rose et l’encens en Méditerranée. Mariemont: Musée royal de Mariemont, 245–50.Google Scholar
Bundrick, S. D. (2016). Athens, Etruria, Rome, Baltimore: reconstructing the biography of an ancient Greek vase. Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 61, 121.Google Scholar
Bundrick, S. D. (2020). Visualizing music. In Lynch, T. A. and Rocconi, E., eds., A Companion to Ancient Greek and Roman Music. New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 117–30.Google Scholar
Burow, J. (1986). Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum Germany 54, Tübingen 5. Munich: C.H. Beck.Google Scholar
Burow, J. (2000 ). Attisch schwarzfigurige Keramik. In Kunze-Götte, E., Heiden, J. and Burow, J., eds., Archaische Keramik aus Olympia. Olympische Forschungen; Bd. 28. Berlin and New York: W. de Gruyter, 203316.Google Scholar
Cahill, N. (2002). Household and City Organization at Olynthus. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Camp, J. McK. (1996). Excavations in the Athenian Agora: 1994 and 1995. Hesperia 65, 231–61.Google Scholar
Chatzidimitriou, A. (2008). Représentations de vente et d’achat d’huile sur les vases attiques à l’époque archaïque et Classique. In Bodiou, L., Frère, D. and Mehl, V., eds., Parfums et odeurs dans l’Antiquité. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 237–44.Google Scholar
Chourmouziades, G. (1970). Ανασκαφή εν Κραννώνι. Archaiologikon deltion 25, 279–82.Google Scholar
Christakis, K. S. (1999). Pithoi and food storage in Neopalatial Crete: a domestic perspective. World Archaeology 31, 120.Google Scholar
Chrysanthaki-Nagle, K. (2009). Πήλινες γυναικείες προτομές και λατρείες στις οικίες της Μακεδονίας και της Θράκης. Archaiologia & Technes 113, 5763.Google Scholar
Closterman, W. E. (2007). Family ideology and family history: the function of funerary markers in Classical Attic Peribolos tombs. American Journal of Archaeology 111, 633–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, B. F. (1991). Attic red-figured lekythoi, secondary types: Class 6L. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 10, 209–30.Google Scholar
De La Genière, J. (1984). «Parfumés comme Crésus». De l’origine du lécythe attique. Bulletin de Correspondence Hellenique 108, 9198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De La Genière, J. (2004). Vasi attici dalle necropolis di Gela. In Panvini, R. and Giudice, F., eds., Ta Attika. Veder Greco a Gela. Ceramiche attiche figurate dall’antica colonia. Rome: “L’Erma” di Bretschneider, 149–55.Google Scholar
De Vries, K. (1977). Attic pottery in the Achaemenid Empire. American Journal of Archaeology 81, 544–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dekoulakou, I. (1973). Αλωνάκι Ναυπάκτου. Archaiologikon deltion 28, 391–93.Google Scholar
Descoeurdes, J.-P. (1967). Terrain F/5. Archaiologikon deltion 22, 278–83.Google Scholar
Dinsmoor, W. B. (1941). Observations on the Hephaisteion. Hesperia Supplements 5.Google Scholar
Dräger, O. (2007). Corpus Vasorum and Antiquorum Germany 84, Erlangen 2. Munich: C.H. Beck.Google Scholar
Erickson, B. (2018). Lerna VIII. The Historical Greek Village. Princeton: American School of Classical Studies at Athens.Google Scholar
Eschbach, N. (2020). Kein Öl in Panathenäischen Preisamphoren? Zu Funktion und Bedeutung einer repräsentativen Gefäßgattung der attischen Vasenmalerei. In Langner, M. and Schmidt, S., eds., Die Materialität griechischer Vasen. Mikrohistorische Perspektiven in der Vasenforschung. Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum. Deutschland. Beihefte; Band 9. Munich: München Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 8799.Google Scholar
Felten, F., Hiller, S., Reinholdt, C., Gauss, W. and Smetana, R. (2003). Ägina-Kolonna 2002. Vorbericht über die Grabungen des Instituts für Klassische Archäologie der Universität Salzburg. Jahreshefte des Österreichischen Archäologischen Instituts 72, 4165.Google Scholar
Felten, F., Reinholdt, C., Pollhammer, E., Gauss, W. and Smetana, R. (2007). Ägina-Kolonna 2006. Vorbericht über die Grabungen des Fachbereichs Altertumswissenschaften/Klassische und Frühägäische Archäologie der Universität Salzburg. Jahrshefte des Osterreichischen Archaologischen Instituts 76, 89119.Google Scholar
Felten, F., Reinholdt, C., Pollhammer, E., Gauss, W. and Smetana, R. (2010). Ägina-Kolonna 2009. Vorbericht über die Grabungen des Fachbereichs Altertumswissenschaften/Klassische und Frühägäische Archäologie der Universität Salzburg. Jahrshefte des Osterreichischen Archaologischen Instituts 79, 4366.Google Scholar
Finkel, I. L. and Reade, J. E. (2002). On some inscribed Babylonian alabastra. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 12, 3146.Google Scholar
Fletcher, R. N. (2011). Greek–Levantine cultural exchange in Orientalising and Archaic pottery shapes. Ancient West & East 10, 1142.Google Scholar
Foxhall, L. (2007). Olive Cultivation in Ancient Greece: Seeking the Ancient Economy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Frère, D. (2006a). Parfums, huiles et crèmes parfumées en Etrurie orientalisante. Mediterranea 3, 87119.Google Scholar
Frère, D. (2006b). Gestes quotidiens pour un parfum d’immortalité. In Bodiou, L., Frère, D. and Mehl, V., eds., L’expression des corps. Gestes, attitudes, regards dans l’iconographie antique. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 195212.Google Scholar
Frère, D. (2008). Un programme de recherches archéologiques et archéométriques sur des huiles et crèmes parfumées dans l’Antiquité. In Bodiou, L., Frère, D. and Mehl, V., eds., Parfums et odeurs dans l’Antiquité. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 205–14.Google Scholar
Fritzilas, S. (2006). Ο Ζωγράφος του Θησέα. Η Αττική αγγειογραφία στην εποχή της νεοσύστατης Αθηναïκής δημοκρατίας. Athens.Google Scholar
Galiatsatou, P. (2020). Mortuary practices in the ancient rural demoi of southeastern Attica under the light of recent evidence from five cemeteries in Mesogaia. In Dimakis, N. and Dijkstra, T., eds., Mortuary Variability and Social Diversity in Ancient Greece: Studies on Ancient Greek Death and Burial. Oxford: Archaeopress, 5062.Google Scholar
Gallis, K. G. (1973). Νομός Λαρίσης. Παλαιόκαστρον Νεοχωρίου Αγιάς (Λακέρεια). Archaiologikon deltion 28, 327–29.Google Scholar
Gallis, K. G. (1975). Παλαιόκαστρο Νεοχωρίου Αγιάς (Λακέρεια). Archaiologikon deltion 30, 193–94.Google Scholar
Garnier, N. and Frère, D. (2008). Une archéologie de l’évanescent. In Verbanck-Piérard, A., Massar, N. and Frére, D., eds., Parfums de l’Antiquité. La rose et l’encens en Méditerranée. Mariemont: Musée royal de Mariemont, 6171.Google Scholar
Garyfallopoulos, A. (2019). Αττικές λευκές λήκυθοι «κυρίου» τύπου στο Βόρειο Αιγαίο και την περιφέρειά του: διασπορά και χρονολόγηση, χρήση, εικονογραφία. In Manakidou, E. and Avramidou, A., eds., Classical Pottery of the Northern Aegean and Its Periphery (480–323/300 BC). Thessaloniki: Thessalonikē University Studio Press, 127–38.Google Scholar
Gericke, H. (1970). Gefässdarstellungen auf griechischen Vasen. Berlin: Hessling.Google Scholar
Gex, K. (1993). Rotfigurige und weissgrundige Keramik. Eretria. Ausgrabungen und Forschungen IX. Lausanne: Payot.Google Scholar
Gex-Morgenthaler, C. (1988). Red-figure lekythoi from Eretria. In Christiansen, J. and Melander, T., eds., Proceedings of the 3rd Symposium on Ancient Greek and Related Pottery. Copenhagen August 31 – September 4 1987. Copenhagen: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, 170–74.Google Scholar
Goette, H. R. and Weber, T. M. (2004). Marathon. Siedlungskammer und Schlachtfeld. Sommerfrische und Olympische Wettkampfstätte. Mainz am Rhein: P. von Zabern.Google Scholar
Haggis, D. C. and Mook, M. S. (2011). The Archaic houses at Azoria. Hesperia Supplements 44, 367–80.Google Scholar
Haggis, D. C. et al. (2007). Excavations at Azoria, 2003–2004, Part 1. The Archaic Civic Complex. Hesperia 76, 243321.Google Scholar
Halm-Tisserant, M. (2004). Keimenon”: de l’objet réifié à l’objet “sujet” dans la peinture de vases grecque. Pallas 65, 3348.Google Scholar
Hanschmann, E. (1981a). Die deutschen Ausgrabungen auf der Argissa-Magula in Thessalien IV. Die Mittlere Bronzezeit. Vol. I. Bonn: Rudolf Habelt.Google Scholar
Hanschmann, E. (1981b). Die deutschen Ausgrabungen auf der Argissa-Magula in Thessalien IV. Die Mittlere Bronzezeit. Vol. II. Bonn: Rudolf Habelt.Google Scholar
Haspels, C. H. E. (1936). Attic Black-Figured Lekythoi. Paris.Google Scholar
Hatzivassiliou, E. (2010). Athenian Black Figure Iconography between 510 and 475 B.C. Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf.Google Scholar
Heinemann, A. (2009). Bild, Gefäß, Praxis: Überlegungen zu attischen Salbgefäßen. In Schmidt, S. and Oakley, J. H., eds., Hermeneutik der Bilder. Beiträge zur Ikonographie und Interpretation griechischer Vasenmalerei. Beihefte zum Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, Deutschland, 4. Munich, 161–75.Google Scholar
Henderson, J. (1972). The lekythos and Frogs 1200–1248. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 76, 133–43.Google Scholar
Hoskins, J. (2006). Agency, biography and objects. In Tilley, C., Keane, W., Kuechler, S., Rowlands, M. and Spyer, P., eds., Handbook of Material Culture. London: Sage, 7484.Google Scholar
Houby-Nielsen, S. H. (1995). ‘Burial language’ in Archaic and Classical Kerameikos. Proceedings of the Danish Institute at Athens 1, 129–91.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, H. R. (2006). Nonsense inscriptions and literacy. Kadmos 45, 136–72.Google Scholar
Isler, H. P. (1984). Grabungen auf dem Monte Iato 1983. Antike Kunst 27, 2532.Google Scholar
Isler, H. P. (1995). Grabungen auf dem Monte Iato 1994. Antike Kunst 38, 2637.Google Scholar
Isler, H. P. (1996). Grabungen auf dem Monte Iato 1995. Antike Kunst 39, 5264.Google Scholar
Isler, H. P. (1997). Grabungen auf dem Monte Iato 1996. Antike Kunst 40, 4860.Google Scholar
Isler, H. P. (2000). Grabungen auf dem Monte Iato 1999. Antike Kunst 43, 110–20.Google Scholar
Isler, H. P. (2009). Die Siedlung auf dem Monte Iato in archaischer Zeit. Jahrbuch des [kaiserlich] deutschen archäologischen Instituts 124, 135222.Google Scholar
Jones, D. W. (1993). Phoenician unguent factories in Dark Age Greece: social approaches to evaluating the archaeological evidence. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 12, 293303.Google Scholar
Jones, J. E., Sackett, L. H. and Graham, A. J. (1962). The Dema house in Attica. Annual of the British School at Athens 57, 75114.Google Scholar
Jones, J. E., Sackett, L. H. and Graham, A. J. (1973). An Attic country house below the cave of Pan at Vari. Annual of the British School at Athens 68, 355452.Google Scholar
Johnston, A. W. (1979). Trademarks on Greek Vases. Warminster: Aris & Philips.Google Scholar
Jubier-Galinier, C. (2014). “Τοῖς νεκροῖσι…τἁς ληκὐθους”: l’évolution des usages du lécythe dans le rituel funéraire athénien aux époques archaïque et Classique. Pallas 94, 3959.Google Scholar
Jubier-Galinier, C. (2016). Des inscriptions et des peintres: l’utilisation de l’écriture chez les peintres à figures noires tardives. In Wachter, R., ed., Töpfer – Maler – Schreiber: Inschriften auf attischen Vasen. Akten des Kolloquiums vom 20. bis 23. September 2012 an den Universitäten Lausanne und Basel. Zurich: Akanthus Verlag für Archäologie, 5578.Google Scholar
Jubier-Galinier, C., Laurens, A.-F. and Tsingarida, A. (2003). Les ateliers de potiers en Attique. De l’idée à l’objet. In Rouillard, P. and Verbanck-Piérand, A., eds., Le vase grec et ses destins. Munich: Biering & Brinkmann, 2743.Google Scholar
Kahil, L. (1965). Rapport de céramique géometrique archaïque. Archaiologikon deltion 20, 285–87.Google Scholar
Kahil, L. (1967). Céramique de l’époque géométrique, subgéométique et archaïque. Archaiologikon deltion 22, 283–85.Google Scholar
Kallipolitis, V. (1965). Αρχαιότητες και Μνημεία Αττικής και Νήσων. Archaiologikon deltion 20, 110–17.Google Scholar
Kei, N. (2008). La fleur. Signe de parfum dans la céramique attique. In Bodiou, L., Frère, D. and Mehl, V., eds., Parfums et odeurs dans l’Antiquité. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 197203.Google Scholar
Klebinder-Gauss, G. (2012). Keramik aus klassischen Kontexten im Apollon-Heiligtum von Ägina-Kolonna: Lokale Produktion und Importe. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press.Google Scholar
Klebinder-Gauss, G. (2019). Dining with the ancestors: the Late Archaic–Classical Westkomplex in Aegina‑Kolonna. In Lemos, I. S. and Tsingarida, A., eds., Beyond the Polis. Rituals, Rites and Cults in Early and Archaic Greece (12th–6th centuries BC). Brussels: CREA Patrimoine, 115–32.Google Scholar
Knigge, U. (1976). Kerameikos 9. Der Südhügel. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Knigge, U. and Willemsen, F. (1964). Die Höhe östlich des Querweges. Archaiologikon deltion 19, 4246.Google Scholar
Kopytoff, I. (1986). The cultural biography of things: commoditization as process. In Appadurai, A., ed., The Social Life of Things. Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 6491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kunze-Götte, E. (1992). Der Kleophrades-Maler unter Malern schwarzfiguriger Amphoren. Eine Werkstattstudie. Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.Google Scholar
Kunze-Götte, E. (2010). CVA Germany 87, Munich 15, Attisch weissgrundige Lekythen. Munich: C.H. Beck.Google Scholar
Kurtz, D. C. (1975). Athenian White Lekythoi. Patterns and Painters. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Kurtz, D. C. (1984). Vases for the dead, an Attic selection, 750–400 B.C. In Brijder, H. A. G., ed., Ancient Greek and Related Pottery. Proceedings of the International Vase Symposium in Amsterdam 12–15 April 1984. Amsterdam: Allard Pierson Museum, 314–28.Google Scholar
Kurtz, D. C. and Boardman, J. (1971). Greek Burial Customs. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Kyriakopoulos, Y. (2015). Aegean cooking-pots in the modern era (1700–1950). In Spataro, M. and Villing, A., eds., Ceramics, Cuisine and Culture: The Archaeology and Science of Kitchen Pottery in the Ancient Mediterranean World. Oxford and Philadelphia: Oxbow, 252–68.Google Scholar
Lallemand, A. (2008). L’imaginaire des parfums dans la littérature antique d’Homère à Ovide. In Verbanck-Piérard, A., Massar, N. and Frère, D., eds., Parfums de l’Antiquité. La rose et l’encens en Méditerranée. Mariemont: Musée royal de Mariemont, 3744.Google Scholar
Lambrugo, C. (2015). Dying young in Archaic Gela (Sicily): from the analysis of the cemeteries to the reconstruction of early colonial identity. In Romero Sánchez, M., Alarcón, G. E. and Aranda, J. G., eds., Children, Spaces and Identity. Philadelphia: Oxbow, 282–93.Google Scholar
Lawall, M. L. et al. (2002). Notes from the Tins 2: research in the Stoa of Attalos. Hesperia 71, 415–33.Google Scholar
Lewis, D. (2018). Behavioural economics and economic behaviour in Classical Athens. In Canevaro, M., Erskine, A., Gray, B. and Ober, J., eds., Ancient Greek History and Contemporary Social Science. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1546.Google Scholar
Lissarrague, F. (2001). Greek Vases: The Athenians and Their images. New York: Riverside.Google Scholar
Livarda, A. (2014). Archaeobotany in Greece. Archaeological Reports 60, 106–16.Google Scholar
Lynch, K. M. (2009). The Persian destruction deposits and the development of pottery research at the Agora excavations. In Camp, J. McK. II and Mauzy, C. A., eds., The Athenian Agora: New Perspectives on an Ancient Site. Mainz: Von Zabern, 6976.Google Scholar
Lynch, K. M. (2011). The Symposium in context: pottery from a Late Archaic house near the Athenian Agora. Hesperia Supplements 46.Google Scholar
Manganaro, G. (1998). Modi dell’alfabetizzazione in Sicilia (dall’Arcaismo all’Ellenismo). Mediterraneo Antico Economie Società Culture 1, 247–70.Google Scholar
Margariti, K. (2018). Lament and death instead of marriage: the iconography of deceased maidens on Attic grave reliefs of the Classical Period. Hesperia 87, 91176.Google Scholar
Marstrander, S. and Seeberg, A. (1964). CVA Norway Public and Private Collections 1. Oslo: Norske videnskaps-akademi i Oslo.Google Scholar
Massar, N. (2009). Parfumer les morts. Usage et contenu des balsamaires hellénistiques en contexte funéraire. In Tsingarida, A., ed., Shapes and Uses of Greek Vases (7th–4th centuries B.C.). Proceedings of the Symposium held at the Université Libre de Bruxelles 27–29 April 2006. Brussels: CReA-Patrimoine, 307–18.Google Scholar
Massar, N. and Verbanck-Piérard, A. (2013). Follow the scent… marketing perfume vases in the Greek world. In Tsingarida, A. and Viviers, D., eds., Pottery Markets in the Ancient Greek World (8th–1st centuries B.C.). Proceedings of the International Symposium held at the Université libre de Bruxelles 19–21 June 2008. Brussels: CReA-Patrimoine, 273–98.Google Scholar
Mertens, J. R. (1975). A white lekythos in the Getty Museum. The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal 2, 2736.Google Scholar
Miles, M. M. (1998). The City Eleusinion. The Athenian Agora 31. Princeton: American School of Classical Studies.Google Scholar
Mizuta, A. (1991). CVA Japan 2. Schwarz- und Rotfigurige Vasen in Japanischen Sammlungen. Tokyo: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.Google Scholar
Moore, M. B. and Philippides, M. Z. P. (1986). Attic Black-Figured Pottery. The Athenian Agora 23. Princeton: American School of Classical Studies at Athens.Google Scholar
Morgan, C. (2004). Attic Fine Pottery of the Archaic to Hellenistic Periods in Phanagoria. Leiden and Boston: Brill.Google Scholar
Morgan, J. (2010). The Classical Greek House. Bristol: Bristol Phoenix Press.Google Scholar
Nazarčuk, V. I. (2010). Black-figured pottery. In Lejpunskaja, N. A., Guldager Bilde, P., Munk Højte, J., Krapivina, V. V. and Kryžickij, S. D., eds., The Lower City of Olbia (Sector NGS) in the 6th Century BC to the 4th Century AD. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press, 143–69.Google Scholar
Neeft, C. W. (2006). Camarina e la sua ceramica corinzia. In Pelagatti, P., Di Stefano, G. and de Lachenal, L., eds., Camarina. 2600 anni dopo la fondazione. Nuovi studi sulla città e sul territorio. Atti del Convegno Internazionale. Ragusa, 7 dicembre 2002/7–9 aprile 2003. Ragusa: Centro studi Feliciano Rossitto, 77107.Google Scholar
Neutsch, B. (1956). Archäologische Grabungen und Funde im Bereich der unteritalischen Soprintendenzen von Tarent, Reggio di Calabria und Salerno (1949–1955). Archäologischer Anzeiger 1956, 192450.Google Scholar
Nevett, L. (2010). Domestic Space in Classical Antiquity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Noble, J. V. (1988). The Techniques of Painted Attic Pottery, rev. ed. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Oakley, J. H. (1997). The Bosanquet Painter. In Oakley, J. H., Coulson, W. D. R. and Palagia, O. eds., Athenian Potters and Painters I. The Conference Proceedings. Oxford: Oxbow, 241–48.Google Scholar
Oakley, J. H. (2004). Picturing Death in Classical Athens: The Evidence of White Lekythoi. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Oakley, J. H. (2020). A Guide to Scenes of Daily Life on Athenian Vases. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Oenbrink, W. (1996). Ein ‘Bild im Bild’-Phänomen – Zur Darstellung figürlich verzierter Vasen auf bemalten attischen Tongefäßen. Hephaistos 14, 81134.Google Scholar
Osborne, R. (2011). The History Written on the Classical Greek Body. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Paga, J. (2015). The Southeast Fountain House in the Athenian Agora: a reappraisal of its date and historical context. Hesperia 84, 355–87.Google Scholar
Paillard, E. (2014). The structural evolution of fifth-century Athenian society: archaeological evidence and literary sources. Mediterranean Archaeology 27, 7784.Google Scholar
Papadopoulos, J. K. (2003). Ceramicus redivivus: the Early Iron Age Potters’ Field in the area of the Classical Athenian Agora. Hesperia Supplements 31.Google Scholar
Papaspyride, S. and Kyparissis, N. (1927–28). Νέα Λήκυθος του Δούριδος. Archaiologikon deltion 11, 91110.Google Scholar
Parisinou, E. (2000a). The Light of the Gods: The Role of Light in Archaic and Classical Greek Cult. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Parisinou, E. (2000b). ‘Lighting’ the world of women: lamps and torches in the hands of women in the Late Archaic and Classical Periods. Greece & Rome 47, 1943.Google Scholar
Parko, H. (2001). Small Corinthian oil-containers: evidence of the Archaic perfume trade? In Scheffer, C., ed., Ceramics in Context. Proceedings of the Internordic Colloquium on Ancient Pottery, held at Stockholm, 13–15 June 1997. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 5560.Google Scholar
Pauly, A. F., Wissowa, G. and Kroll, W. (1937). Paulys Real-Encyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft, vol. 17. Stuttgart: J. B. Metzlerscher Verlag.Google Scholar
Payne, H. (1931). Necrocorinthia: A Study of Corinthian Art in the Archaic Period. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Pemberton, E. (2020). Small and miniature vases at Ancient Corinth. Hesperia 89, 281338.Google Scholar
Perreault, J. Y. and Bonias, Z. (2006). L’habitat d’Argilos: les céramiques archaïques, un aperçu. In De La Genière, J., ed., Les clients de la céramique grecque. Actes du Colloque de l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. Paris, 30–31 janvier 2004. Cahiers du Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum. Paris: Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, 4954.Google Scholar
Pinjuh, J.-M. (2014). Platons Hippias Minor. Übersetzung und Kommentar. Tübingen: Narr.Google Scholar
Pipili, M. (2009). White-ground lekythoi in athenian private collections: some iconographic observations. In Oakley, J. and Palagia, O., eds., Athenian Potters and Painters, Volume II. Oxford and Oakville: Oxbow, 241–49.Google Scholar
Plassart, A. (1928). Delos 11. Les sanctuaires et les cultes du Mont Cynthe. Paris: De Boccard.Google Scholar
Pologiorgi, M. (2003–2009). Ανασκαφή Νεκροταφείου στο Χαλάνδρι. Archaiologikon deltion 58–64, 143210.Google Scholar
Pologiorgi, M. (2015). Ιερό Αρτέμιδος Βραυρωνίας: τα ξύλινα ευρήματα των ανασκαφών 1961–1963. ΑΡΧΑΙΟΛΟΓΙΚΗ ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΣ 154, 123216.Google Scholar
Quincey, J. H. (1949). The metaphorical sense of Ληκυθος and Ampulla. Classical Quarterly 43, 3244.Google Scholar
Rhomaios, K. A. (1932). CVA Greece 1, Athens, National Museum 1. Paris: H. Champion.Google Scholar
Richter, G. M. A. and Milne, M. J. (1935). Shapes and Names of Athenian Vases. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.Google Scholar
Robb, J. (2018). Contained within history. History and Anthropology 29, 3236.Google Scholar
Robb, J. (2020). Material time. In Gaskell, I. and Carter, S. A., eds., The Oxford Handbook of History and Material Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 123–39.Google Scholar
Roberts, S. (1986). The Stoa Gutter Well: a Late Archaic deposit in the Athenian Agora. Hesperia 55, 172.Google Scholar
Robertson, M. (1992). The Art of Vase-Painting in Classical Athens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Rotroff, S. I. (1999). How did pots function within the landscape of the daily living?. In Villanueva Puig, E. et al., eds., Céramique et peinture grecques. Modes d’emploi. Paris: La Documentation Française, 6374.Google Scholar
Rotroff, S. I. and Oakley, J. H. (1992). Debris from a public dining place in the Athenian Agora. Hesperia Supplements 25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudolph, W. W. (1984). Excavations at Porto Cheli and vicinity, preliminary report VI: Halieis, the stratigraphy of the streets in the northeast quarter of the lower town. Hesperia 53, 123–70.Google Scholar
Sabetai, V. (2001). CVA Greece 6, Thebes, Archaeological Museum 1. Athens: Académie d’Athènes.Google Scholar
Sackett, L. H., Hankey, V., Howell, R. J., Jacobsen, T. W. and Popham, M. R. (1966). Prehistoric Euboea: contributions toward a survey. Annual of the British School at Athens 61, 33112.Google Scholar
Saggini, T. (2019). Perserschutt in Eretria?: pottery from a pit in the Agora. In Morais, R., Leão, D., Pérez, D. and Ferreira, D., eds., Greek Art in Motion: Studies in honour of Sir John Boardman on the occasion of his 90th Birthday. Oxford: Archaeopress, 366–74.Google Scholar
Salskov-Roberts, H. (2002). Were pots purpose-made for the funeral or reused? Can inscriptions throw light on the problem? In Rathje, A., Nielsen, M. and Bundgaard Rasmussen, B., eds., Pots for the Living, Pots for the Dead. Copenhagen: University of Copenhagen, 931.Google Scholar
Săndulescu, C. (1962). Studiu asupra onomatologiei ceramice greceşti. Studii Clasice 4, 3548.Google Scholar
Sansone, D. (2016). Whatever happened to Euripides’ Lekythion (Frogs 1198–1247)? In Kyriakou, P. and Rengakos, A., eds., Wisdom and Folly in Euripides. Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 319–34.Google Scholar
Sapouna-Sakellaraki, E. (1987). Αμάρυνθος, θέση Γεράνι ή Αγία Κυριακή. Archaiologikon deltion 42, 200214.Google Scholar
Schaus, G. P. (1992). Archaic imported fine wares from the Acropolis, Mytilene. Hesperia 61, 356–74.Google Scholar
Schmidt, S. (2005). Rhetorische Bilder auf attischen Vasen. Visuelle Kommunikation im 5. Jahrhundert v. Chr. Berlin: Reimer.Google Scholar
Serbeti, E. (1997). Attic pottery from a deposit in Eretria. In Oakley, J. H., Coulson, W. D. R. and Palagia, O., eds., Athenian Potters and Painters I. The Conference Proceedings. Oxford: Oxbow, 491–99.Google Scholar
Sgourou, M. (2002). Excavating houses and graves: exploring aspects of everyday life and afterlife in ancient Thasos. In Stamatopoulou, M. and Yeroulanou, M., eds., Excavating Classical Culture. Oxford: Beazley Archive, 112.Google Scholar
Shapiro, H. (2014). The Robinson Group of Panathenaic Amphorae. In Oakley, J. ed., Athenian Potters and Painters III, Oxford and Philadelphia: Oxbow, 221–30.Google Scholar
Shear, J. L. (2003). Prizes from Athens: the list of Panathenaic prizes and the sacred oil. Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 142, 87108.Google Scholar
Shear, L. (1993). The Persian destruction of Athens: evidence from agora deposits. Hesperia 62, 383482.Google Scholar
Shelmerdine, C. W. (1995). Shining and fragrant cloth in Homeric epic. In Carter, J. B. and Morris, S. P., eds., The Ages of Homer. A Tribute to Emily Townsend Vermeule. Austin: University of Texas Press, 99107.Google Scholar
Simon, E. (1989). Die Sammlung Kiseleff im Martin-von-Wagner-Museum der Universität Würzburg. Minoische und griechische Antiken. Mainz am Rhein: P. Von Zabern.Google Scholar
Smith, A. C. and Volioti, K. (2019). Lesser pots go places: the Attic “brand” in Macedonia and Thrace. In Manakidou, E. and Avramidou, A., eds., Classical Pottery of the Northern Aegean and Its Periphery (480–323/300 BC). Thessaloniki: Thessalonikē University Studio Press, 175–87.Google Scholar
Soueref, K. (1999). Τούμπα Θεσσαλονίκης 1999. Ανασκάπτοντας στην Τράπεζα και στο αρχαίο νεκροταφείο. Αρχαιολογικό Έργο Μακεδονίας και Θράκης 13, 177–90.Google Scholar
Sparkes, B. A. and Talcott, L. (1970). Black and plain pottery of the 6th, 5th and 4th centuries B.C. The Athenian Agora 12. Princeton: American School of Classical Studies at Athens.Google Scholar
Spetsiéri-Chorémi, A. (1991). Un dépôt de sanctuaire domestique de la fin de l’époque archaïque à Corfou. Bulletin de Correspondence Hellenique 115, 183211.Google Scholar
Spitaels, P. (1978). Insula 3. Tower Compound 1. Thorikos VII, 39110.Google Scholar
Stais, V. (1893). Ο εν Μαραθώνι Τύμβος. Mitteilungen des deutschen archäologischen Instituts (Athenische Abteilung) 18, 4663.Google Scholar
Stansbury-O’Donnell, M. (2006). Vase Painting, Gender and Social Identity in Archaic Athens. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stavropoulou-Gatsi, M. (2010). New archaeological researches in Aitolia, Akarnania, and Leukas. In Antonetti, C., ed., Lo spazio ionico e le comunità della Grecia nord-occidentale. Territorio, società, istituzioni. Atti del Convegno Internazionale Venezia, 7–9 gennaio 2010. Pisa: ETS, 7996.Google Scholar
Steiner, A. (1992). Pottery and cult in Corinth: oil and water at the Sacred Spring. Hesperia 61, 385408.Google Scholar
Steiner, A. (2007). Reading Greek Vases. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Steinhart, M. (1996). Töpferkunst und Meisterzeichnung. Attische Wein- und Ölgefäße aus der Sammlung Zimmermann. Mainz: Von Zabern.Google Scholar
Steinhauer, G. (2009). Marathon and the Archaeological Museum. Athens: John S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation.Google Scholar
Stewart, A. and Martin, R. (2005). Attic imported pottery at Tel Dor, Israel: an overview. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 337, 7994.Google Scholar
Themelis, P. (1981). Ανασκαφή Ερέτριας. Πρακτικὰ τῆς ἐν Ἀθήναις Ἀρχαιολογικῆς Ἑταιρείας 137, 141–53.Google Scholar
Thompson, H. A. (1955). Activities in the Athenian Agora: 1954. Hesperia 24, 5071.Google Scholar
Tiverios, M. (1974). Παναθηναïκά. Archaiologikon deltion 29, 1 42–53.Google Scholar
Tiverios, M. (2009). Η Πανεπιστημιακή ανασκαφή στο Καραμπουρνάκι Θεσσαλονίκης. In Adam-Veleni, P. and Tzanavari, K., eds., 20 χρόνια. Το Αρχαιολογικό Έργο στη Μακεδονία και στη Θράκη. Thessaloniki, 385–96.Google Scholar
Toher, M. (1999). On ‘Thucydides’ blunder’: 2.34.5. Hermes 127, 497501.Google Scholar
Torelli, M. (2004). The red-figured ceramics from Gela: a contribution to the reconstruction of the cultural profile of a city. In Panvini, R. and Giudice, F., eds., Ta Attika. Veder Greco a Gela. Ceramiche attiche figurate dall’antica colonia. Rome: “L’Erma” di Bretschneider, 2732.Google Scholar
Touzé, R. (2008). Les matières premières employées dans la confection des huiles, onguents et poudres parfumés en Grèce ancienne. Les aromates à l’épreuve de l’expression. In Bodiou, L., Frère, D. and Mehl, V.., eds., Parfums et odeurs dans l’Antiquité. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 4559.Google Scholar
Trinkl, E. (2014). Grabkult in klassischer Zeit – weißgrundige Lekythen in ihrem Kontext. In Thür, G., ed., Grabrituale Tod und Jenseits in Frühgeschichte und Altertum: Akten der 3. Tagung des Zentrums Archäologie und Altertumswissenschaften an der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Vienna: Verlag der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 7794.Google Scholar
Tsakirgis, B. (1996). Houses and households. American Journal of Archaeology 100, 777–81.Google Scholar
Tsakirgis, B. (2005). Living and working around the Athenian Agora: a preliminary case study of three houses. In Ault, B. A. and Nevett, L. C., eds., Ancient Greek Houses and Households: Chronological, Regional, and Social Diversity. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 6782.Google Scholar
Tsiafakis, D. (2019). CVA USA 40, Malibu 10. Athenian Red-Figure Column and Volute Kraters. Los Angeles: The J. Paul Getty Museum.Google Scholar
Tuna-Nörling, Y. (1996). Attische Keramik aus Klazomenai. Saarbrücken: Saarbrücker Druckerei und Verlag.Google Scholar
Tuna-Nörling, Y. (1999). Daskyleion I. Die attische Keramik. Izmir: Ege Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi.Google Scholar
Turner, M. (2005). Aphrodite and her birds: the iconology of Pagenstecher Lekythoi. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 48, 5796.Google Scholar
Vallicelli, M. C. (2004). La ceramica a figure nere di Adria: i rinvenimenti da abitato. In Reusser, C. and Bentz, M., eds., Attische Vasen in etruskischem Kontext – Funde aus Häusern und Heiligtümern. Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum. Deutschland. Beihefte; Band 2. Munich: C. H. Beck, 916.Google Scholar
Van De Put, W. D. J. (2006a). CVA The Netherlands 9, Amsterdam 3. Black-Figure, Pattern and Six Technique Lekythoi. Amsterdam: Allard Pierson Museum.Google Scholar
Van De Put, W. D. J. (2006b). CVA The Netherlands 10, Amsterdam 4. Red-Figure and White-Ground Lekythoi. Amsterdam: Allard Pierson Museum.Google Scholar
Van De Put, W. D. J. and Docter, R. (2012). A lekythos found in house 1 at Thorikos (2007 Campaign). In Docter, R., ed., Thorikos 10 Reports & Studies. Ghent: Department of Archaeology, Ghent University, 5156.Google Scholar
Vanderpool, E. (1946). The Rectangular Rock-Cut Shaft. Hesperia 15, 265336.Google Scholar
Varoucha, E. A. (1925–26). Κυκλαδικοί Τάφοι της Πάρου. ΑΡΧΑΙΟΛΟΓΙΚΗ ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΣ 1925–26, 98114.Google Scholar
Velenis, G. and Zachariadis, S. (2019). Considerations on the function and usage of pottery lamps, inspired by finds from the Forum of Thessaloniki. In Motsianos, I. and Garnett, K., eds., Glass, Wax and Metal: Lighting Technologies in Late Antique, Byzantine and Medieval Times. Oxford: Archaeopress, 184–94.Google Scholar
Villing, A. (2020). Using Greek vases: developing use-wear analysis as an archaeology of practice. In Langner, M. and Schmidt, S., eds., Die Materialität griechischer Vasen. Mikrohistorische Perspektiven in der Vasenforschung. Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum. Deutschland. Beihefte; Band 9. Munich, 101–15.Google Scholar
Villing, A. and Mommsen, H. (2017). Rhodes and Kos: East Dorian pottery production of the Archaic period. Annual of the British School at Athens 112, 99154.Google Scholar
Vlavianou-Tsaliki, A. (1981). Ανασκαφή Τάφων στην Ερέτρια. Archaiologikon deltion 36, 5881.Google Scholar
Volioti, K. (2007). Visual ambiguity in the oeuvre of the Gela Painter: a new lekythos from Thessaly. Rivista di Archeologia 31, 91101.Google Scholar
Volioti, K. (2011). The materiality of graffiti: socialising a lekythos in Pherai. In Baird, J. A. and Taylor, C., eds., Ancient Graffiti in Context. New York: Routledge, 134–52.Google Scholar
Volioti, K. (2014). Dimensional standardization and the use of Haimonian lekythoi. BABesch Suppl. 25, 149–68.Google Scholar
Volioti, K. (2021, 2022). Leafless cups: towards a relational understanding. In Palaiothodoros, D. and Van De Put, W., eds., Oikos, Taphos, Temenos. Attic Pottery and Iconography in Greek Contexts.Google Scholar
Volioti, K. and Papageorgiou, M. (2014–15). A new signed Corinthian aryballos. Talanta 46–47, 107–20.Google Scholar
Walters, H. B. (1905). History of Ancient Pottery. Greek, Etruscan and Roman, vol. I. London: J. Murray.Google Scholar
Webster, T. B. L. (1972). Potter and Patron in Classical Athens. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Westgate, R. (2015). Space and social complexity in Greece from the Early Iron Age to the Classical Period. Hesperia 84, 4795.Google Scholar
Williams, D. (2013). Greek potters and painters: marketing and movings. In Tsingarida, A. and Viviers, D., eds., Pottery Markets in the Ancient Greek World (8th–1st Centuries B.C.). Proceedings of the International Symposium held at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, 19–21 June 2008. Brussels: CReA-Patrimoine, 3960.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. J. A. (1996). Archaeology in Sicily, 1988–1995. Archaeological Reports 42, 59123.Google Scholar
Woolley, L. (1938a). The excavations at Al Mina, Sueidia. I. Journal of Hellenic Studies 58, 130.Google Scholar
Woolley, L. (1938b). The excavations at Al Mina, Sueidia. II. Journal of Hellenic Studies 58, 133–70.Google Scholar
Wright, J. H. (1886). Unpublished white lekythoi from Attika. American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts 2, 385407.Google Scholar
Yeivin, S. (1952). Archaeological news. Near East (Supplement). Israel. September 1950–October 1951. American Journal of Archaeology 56, 141–43.Google Scholar
Yialouris, N. (1957). Δοκιμαστικαί έρευναι εις τον κόλπον της Φειάς Ηλείας. ΑΡΧΑΙΟΛΟΓΙΚΗ ΕΦΗΜΕΡΙΣ 96, 3143.Google Scholar
Young, R. S. (1951). Sepulturae intra urbem. Hesperia 20, 67134.Google Scholar
Zachariadou, O., Kyriakou, D. and Baziotopoulou, E. (1985). Σωστική Ανασκαφή στον Ανισόπεδο Κόμβο Λένορμαν-Κωνσταντινουπόλεως. Athens Annals of Archaeology 18, 3950.Google Scholar
Zaouri, A. (1989). “Κραννών. Αγρός Κ. Ρετζέπη”, Archaiologikon deltion 44, 231–33.Google Scholar
Zimmermann-Elseify, N. (2011). CVA Germany 89, Berlin 12. Attisch weissgrundige Lekythen. Munich: C. H. Beck.Google Scholar
Zimmermann-Elseify, N. (2013). CVA Germany 93, Berlin 13. Attisch Rotfigurige Lekythen. Munich: C. H. Beck.Google Scholar
Zimmermann-Elseify, N. (2015). CVA Germany 99, Berlin 16. Attische Salbgefässe. Munich: C. H. Beck.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • A Family Affair
  • Edited by J. A. Baird, Birkbeck College, University of London, April Pudsey, Manchester Metropolitan University
  • Book: Housing in the Ancient Mediterranean World
  • Online publication: 08 July 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108954983.005
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • A Family Affair
  • Edited by J. A. Baird, Birkbeck College, University of London, April Pudsey, Manchester Metropolitan University
  • Book: Housing in the Ancient Mediterranean World
  • Online publication: 08 July 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108954983.005
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • A Family Affair
  • Edited by J. A. Baird, Birkbeck College, University of London, April Pudsey, Manchester Metropolitan University
  • Book: Housing in the Ancient Mediterranean World
  • Online publication: 08 July 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108954983.005
Available formats
×