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Red-figured Vases recently acquired by the British Museum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

In Vols. XVIII. (1898) and XXXI. (1911) of the Journal I gave some account of black-figured vases acquired by the British Museum subsequently to the appearance of Vol. II. of the Catalogue of Vases in 1893. On page 1 of the latter volume a promise was made that another paper should follow, describing red-figured vases similarly acquired; but its appearance has been delayed by the war and other circumstances, with the result that the number of vases now included amounts to nearly fifty. Seventeen other vases acquired during the period 1895–1920 are omitted here as having been already published elsewhere, but a list is appended on page 150. The total number of red-figured vases added to the collection since 1894 is thus over sixty.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1921

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References

1 Handbook of R.F. Vases, i. 183 ff.

2 Cf. the Ricketts-Shannon, cup, J.H.S. 1909, pl. 8Google Scholar.

3 Mon. Piot, xx. 142.

4 J.H.S. xxvii. 262.

5 Cf. Beazley, , Vases in Amer. Mus., p. 21Google Scholar.

6 Rev. Arch. iv. (1916), p. 396, No. 71, 19.

7 Pottier, , Bévue des Études Grecques, 1893, pp. 40, 41Google Scholar; cf. also G 82 and G 101 in that collection; and see id., Cat. des Vases du Louvre, p. 924. Hoppin, , Handbook to R.F. Vases, ii. 275Google Scholar, assigns this group to Paidikos, but does not mention the B.M. vase.

8 See Klein, , Meisters, pp. 111, 220Google Scholar; J.H.S. xii. 346; Röm. Mitth. 1890, p. 341; Pottier, , Cat. des Vases du Louvre, p. 910Google Scholar.

9 Vases in Amer. Mus. p. 87.

10 Op. cit. p. 87.

11 Notice d'une collection de vases peints ď Etrurie, 1845.

12 Amer. Vases, p. 110; see also Hoppin, , Handbook, i. 102Google Scholar.

13 Handbook, i. 283.

14 See also Hoppin, , Handbook, i. 98Google Scholar.

15 Amer. Vases, p. 96; see also Hoppin, , Handbook, ii. 324Google Scholar.

16 Amer. Vases, p. 133; see also Hoppin, , Handbook, i. 104Google Scholar.

17 Canino Sale Cat. (Notice de Vases peints), 1845, No. 36.

18 Beazley, , Amer. Vases, pp. 144, 172Google Scholar.

19 Vases in Amer. Mus. p. 196. See Brit. Mus. E 202, 204, 207.

20 See on the subject Bluemner, , Technologie, 2nd edn., i. 121 ff.Google Scholar; Smith, , Diet, of Antiq. 3. i. 8971Google Scholar.

21 Cf. E 128 in Brit. Mus.

22 Greek Athletic Sports, p. 419.

23 J.H.S. xxvi. 219. This is even less likely in the cases of vases of the later period such as the present one.

24 See Reinach, , Répertoire des Vases, i. 1 ffGoogle Scholar. For an interesting study of the Greek painted vases of this period (fourth century B.C.) see Ducati, P., Saggio di studio sulla ceramica attica figurata. Rome, 1916Google Scholar.

25 Jahrbuch, xxv. (1910), p. 137.

26 Froehner, Coll. Branteghem, No. 163.

27 Jahrbuch xiv., (1899), p. 219.

28 The subject is reproduced in Fig. 13 by means of the eyclograph, the photograph having been taken under the supervision of Mr. A. H. Smith, the inventor of the machine.

29 Cf. Schol. in Eur., Tro. 315Google Scholar: and Schol. in Eur., Phoen, 344Google Scholar:

30 D 11 in the B. M. may be compared with this: but here the bride and bridegroom are on foot.

31 Mommsen, , Feste der Stadt Athen, p. 392Google Scholar.

32 Paus. i. 38, 8.

33 Demosth, . c. Neaer. §75Google Scholar.

34 Op. cit. p. 394.

35 This vase was described at a meeting of the Hellenic Society by Mr. (now Sir) Cecil Smith in 1906, and is also mentioned by Mr.Farnell, in his Cults of Greek States, v. 260Google Scholar, and by Mr.Cook, A. B., Zeus, i. 686 and 709Google Scholar, note 2, but so far no illustration of it has been given.

36 Rawlinson, ii. 505, points out that Herodotus regards Europe as including the whole of Northern Asia. The district of which he is speaking is that east of the Ural Mountains, i. e. South-western Siberia, to the north-west of the territory assigned to the Issedones.

37 Prom. Vinct. 830 ff. iii. 23.

38 See Roscher, , Lexikon, i. 1768Google Scholar, for the gryphon in Greek mythology, and for illustrations in art, Minns, , Scythians and Greeks, passim, and Ducati, Ceram. att. fig. p. 92Google Scholar.

39 See also Minns, op. cit. pp. 112, 440.