1478. Mon. dell’ Inst. viii. pl. 21 and Annali, 1865, p. 262 ff.: cf. Virg. Aen. vii. 785; ix. 365. See also B.M. Cat. of Vases, p. 20.
1479. Naples 856; B.M. F 213 (?).
1480. Naples 2293 and R.C. 141 = Reinach, i. 387; Berlin 3023.
1481. B.M. F 191 ff.; Naples 871, 2855, 3368.
1482. Patroni thinks that such vases as Jatta 1498 (= Reinach, i. 110, 4) have formed the model for these Saticula vases.
1483. E.g. Naples 2852.
1484. E.g. B.M. F 143–148; Naples 3093, 3129: see Arch. Anzeiger, 1893, p. 93.
1485. B.M. Cat. of Vases, iv., F 523 ff.
1487. Röm. Mitth. 1887, pl. 10, p. 231.
1488. E.g. Reinach, i. 448 = Arch. Zeit. 1883, pl. 7; Dubois Maisonneuve, Introd. pl. 69; Naples 3241 = Reinach, i. 384, 1–3; Naples 2416, 2418, 2894, 2918, 3247; see Patroni, Ceram. Antica, p. 33, and Furtwaengler, Meisterwerke, p. 149.
1489. E.g. B.M. F 237, 238 (wrongly attributed to Campania in Catalogue).
1490. See B.M. F 297, 301, and Ann. dell’ Inst. 1852, pls. M, N, P, p. 316 ff.
1491. B.M. F 254–68; Berlin 3607–19; Naples 2542–61; Petersburg 1693–1710. Cf. Notizie degli Scavi, 1894, p. 107, and Ath. Mitth. 1901, pl. 2 (an example from the Acropolis at Athens); also a plate inscribed underneath (Schöne in Comm. Phil. in hon. Mommseni, p. 653). See also p. 194 and Chapter XV.
1494. Lenormant, however, states that they have been found at Tarentum, as also in the neighbourhood of Lecce and Bari (Gaz. Arch. 1881–82, p. 103).
1495. Rayet and Collignon, pl. 13, p. 330.
1496. Excavations in Cyprus, p. 77, fig. 140.
1497. See also B.M. F 553; Ath. Mitth. 1901, pls. 3, 4, p. 70 ff.; Pottier, Louvre Cat. ii. p. 276.
1498. See Ann. dell’ Inst. 1884, p. 5 ff.; Rayet and Collignon, p. 332. Fourteen or fifteen examples are known.
1499. One was found by Lord Savile at Civita Lavinia (Lanuvium) in recent years (Notizie degli Scavi, 1895, p. 45). They have also been found on the Esquiline (see Röm. Mitth. 1887, p. 233).
1500. Excavations in Cyprus, pl. 3.
1501. For terracotta examples painted in tempera see B.M. Cat. of Terracottas, B 281–91; and compare B 286 with an example from Cyprus, Perrot, Hist. de l’Art, iii. p. 697. See also Berlin 1292 ff.
1502. See for a terracotta example B 460 in B.M.; also B 203–4 from Rhodes. Cf. Dumont-Pottier, i. chap. xiii.
1503. Röm. Mitth. v. (1890), pl. 11, p. 313 ff.
1504. Cat. 2190: cf. Röm. Mitth. 1890, p. 316.
1505. Klein, Meistersig.2 p. 216; Berlin 2202. A vase in the Louvre with the καλός-name Epilykos is probably by Prokles (see Monuments Piot, ix. p. 142).
1506. See Rayet and Collignon, p. 261: for other examples, B.M. E 786, 792, 793; Berlin 4044 = Coll. Sabouroff, pl. 69; Mus. Greg. ii. 89, 1; and the Kleomenes vase in the Louvre (if genuine). See on this vase Mon. Grecs, 1897, pls. 16–7, p. 53; Furtwaengler, Neuere Falschungen, p. 21; Rev. Arch. xxxvii. (1900), p. 181; Monuments Piot, ix. p. 138.
1507. See Hartwig in Ἐφ. Ἀρχ. 1894, pl. 6, p. 121.
1508. Stephani, Compte-Rendu, 1870–71, pl. 1; Ber. d. sächs. Gesellsch. 1853, pls. 1–2 (with Eros, dove, and swan): cf. the B.M. terracottas, D 89–91.
1509. See Rayet and Collignon, p. 275, and for other examples Stackelberg, Gräber der Hell. pls. 49–52; Treu, Gr. Thongef. pl. 1; Cab. Pourtalès, pl. 28.
1510. Cf. the Proto-Attic vases, Athens 468 and 657, with the B.M. bronze vase-handles, Nos. 258, 383.
1511. Cf. the Aegina jug mentioned above, B.M. A 1369 and the vase given in Rayet and Collignon, p. 68; also the Tanagra tripod, Berlin No. 1727, and Louvre A 396 from Rhodes.
1512. See B.M. B 295, 296, 382.
1514. Cf. Coll. Sabouroff, pl. 74, 3: see also Ath. Mitth. 1880, pl. 10; Ἐφ. Ἀρχ. 1885, pl. 9, 11; B.M. G 22–3; Berlin 2704, 2884; Raoul-Rochette, Mon. Inéd. pl. 49, 3.
1515. Cf. Röm. Mitth. 1897, p. 253 ff.; Mon. Grecs, 1885–88, p. 43 ff.; Rayet and Collignon, p. 341; Bull. de Corr. Hell. 1888, p. 491.
1516. Cf. Dumont-Pottier, i. p. 186 ff.
1517. See Bull. de Corr. Hell. 1888, p. 491 (Pottier).
1518. Ibid. p. 497; also Mon. Grecs, 1885–88, pl. 8, p. 44: cf. the Etruscan bucchero vases, e.g. Pottier, Louvre Cat. ii. p. 316 ff.
1519. Bull. de Corr. Hell. 1898, pp. 439, 497.
1520. De Ridder, De ectypis aeneis, passim.
1521. Bull. de Corr. Hell. 1888, p. 500; Ath. Mitth. 1886, pl. 4 (Crete).
1522. E.g. B.M. A 587, 597 ff.
1523. For a complete list of early vases with reliefs see Mon. Grecs, 1885–88, p. 54 ff.
1524. For examples see Rayet and Collignon, p. 266; Jahrbuch 1894, p. 62.
1525. Cat. 525 = Reinach, i. 11.
1526. Monuments Piot, x. pls. 6–7.
1527. On the later development of imitation of metal in vases see Rizzo in Röm. Mitth. xii. (1897), p. 253 ff.
1528. See also on these vases Gaz. Arch. 1879, pl. 6, p. 38 ff., and Martha, L'Art Étrusque, p. 488. They are styled by Gamurrini “Etrusco-Campanian.”
1529. Amer. Journ. of Arch. 1885, pl. 1.
1531. Céramiques, i. p. 393.
1532. Gr. u. sic. Vasenb. p. 117.
1533. Homerische Becher, in 50tes Winckelmannsfestprogr. (1890).
1534. G 104 in B.M. and the jug by Dionysios (Robert, op. cit. p. 90).
1535. Op. cit. p. 1 ff.: cf. Suet. Ner. 47.
1536. Clay moulds for these bowls have been found at Athens, suggesting that there was a fabric there. But they were probably not confined to one centre. See Ath. Mitth. 1901, p. 67, note.
1537. J.H.S. xxii. p. 3.
1538. Arch. Anzeiger, 1904, p. 191 (in Oxford).
1539. Cf. Mon. Grecs, 1885–88, p. 48.
1540. Berlin 2891, from Crete.
1541. See Robert, op. cit. p. 90. In the same work will be found full descriptions of most of the other bowls.
1542. See Class. Review, 1894, p. 325.
1543. E.g. G 105, in B.M.
1546. B.M. G 179 ff.: see Ann. dell’ Inst. 1871, p. 5 ff.; Röm. Mitth. 1897, p. 260; Notizie degli Scavi, 1897, p. 390.
1548. Gaz. Arch. 1879, p. 43. Recent writers have maintained that “Calene” ware is Greek in origin, and not confined to this site. See Dragendorff in Bonner Jahrbücher, xcvi. p. 25, and Rizzo in Röm. Mitth. 1897, p. 259: cf. Berlin 3882.
1549. Benndorf, Gr. u. sic. Vasenb. pl. 56.
1550. Ibid. pls. 57–8.
1551. For instances of moulds for these medallions see B.M. Cat. of Terracottas, E 72–4.
1552. See Röm. Mitth. 1897, p. 260.
1553. See Evans, Syracusan Medallions, in Num. Chron. 3rd Ser. xi. p. 319; also Rev. Arch. xxiv. (1894). p. 173.
1555. A similar example is in the Athens Museum, from Crete (Invent. No. 2141).
1556. Reference may be made generally to important articles by Watzinger in Ath. Mitth. 1901, p. 50 ff., and Dragendorff in Bonner Jahrbücher, ci. p. 140 ff.; also (for Egypt) to Amer. Journ. of Arch. 1885, p. 18 ff., and Furtwaengler in Gr. Vasenm. p. 205 ff. See also Chapter XXII., and XXI. init.
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Transcriber’s Note:
Errors which can be attributed to printer’s mistakes have been corrected, as noted below. Lapses in punctuation are corrected with no further mention.
In Volume II, the author has included as Fig. 173 a table of alphabets used on Greek vases.
Inscriptions using archaic Greek characters which do not exist in the unicode character set are provided as inline images, and as such are not searchable. For instance, the character for pi (Π) resembles the modern gamma (Γ). The character upsilon (Υ) frequently appears as a modern Roman V. On occasion, sigma appears in the form of a modern C (the lunate sigma Ϲ).
Footnotes, which were numbered sequentially on each page, have been resequenced to be unique across the text. Cross-references to those numbers in the text have been changed to reflect this. The notes themselves have been moved to the end of each chapter.
Internal links have been provided for ease of reference.
Many references refer to the second volume of this work, and when viewed in a browser, the links will guide you to the locations in Volume II on the Project Gutenberg site.
Each plate was followed by a blank page on its verso, which have been removed here. The position of each plate, as well as that of all other figures, has been adjusted slightly to avoid falling in mid-paragraph. The pages devoted to plates were not counted in pagination.
The following anomalies regarding footnotes were observed:
On p. 153, the reference to the third footnote (521), referring the reader to “Pottier Louvre Cat., p. 381 ff.” does not appear in the text. The section discusses “Les vases à reliefs de style archaique en Italie et en Sicile”. The reference has been added following the paragraph ending with “designs of Oriental character”.
On p. 158, the reference to footnote (531) is missing from the text. The reference has been added at the end of the sentence beginning “Falkner found at Pompeii...”.
On p. 210, the sole footnote is missing its number, which is added here as 770.
On p. 214, the reference to the first footnote (775), referring the reader to Alexandre Brongniart’s Traité des arts céramiques: ou des poteries, i., p 552, does not appear in the text. The passage discusses the analysis of the glaze, and it seems appropriate to add the reference at the end of the paragraph beginning “This lustrous glaze...”.
On p. 427, footnote 1314 refers to a series of items, the last of which (‘270’) seems either out of order, or a misprint for ‘470’.
The following table contains those textual issues which are readily attributed to printer’s errors:
| p. 96 | which[,] were so light | Removed |
| p. 204 | It has been noted by J[o/a]hn | Corrected. |