• m10-cor-143-10
    (Telif hakkı Sart Amerikan Hafriyat Heyeti / Harvard Üniversitesi)

Late Corinthian Warrior Alabastron Fragment

Dönem
ca. 570-550 BC
Sardeis veya Müze Env. No.
P59.442
Malzeme
Pişmiş toprak
Eserin Türü
Seramik
Seramiğin Şekli
Alabastron
Seramik Mal Grubu
Geç Korint
Pottery Attribution
Yerleşim
Sardis
Alan (Sektör)
HoB
Açma
UT
Koordinatlar
E90 - E95 / S195 - S200 ca *120
Tanım
Wall fragment. Two warrior friezes. In the upper frieze, a series of warriors walk to the right. Only portions of two men remain. The warriors hold large round shields that cover all but their helmets and legs. The shields are not compass-drawn and are awkwardly incised, with brownish red added to the centers. In the field are a fan-shaped floral filler and dots. Three glazed lines separate the upper and lower friezes. The lower frieze retains only the helmeted head of a single warrior. The incision is broad and careless. Glaze: dark brown, glossy, and unevenly applied. Clay: hard and fairly fine. The clay is fired to different colors on the interior and exterior, giving the appearance of two layers: interior, pale orange (Munsell no. 7.5 YR 7/4, pink); exterior, yellow-buff (Munsell no. 10 YR 7/4, very pale brown).
Boyutlar
P.H. 0.082; P.W. 0.076; Th. 0.005
Yorum
Cf. Corinth XIII, 191, pl. 26 (inv. no. T1748, from grave 172). The following comparisons were suggested by D. A. Amyx (private correspondence, 29 January 1986): Payne, NC nos. 1229, 1230 (Delos 457--58); ibid., no. 1228 (Athens 290) from Tanagra. For the upside-down "fan rosette," ibid., 820 (Delos 353)
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