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| ARV¹ 210, -. ARV² 315, -. G.M.A. Richter, BSA 46, 1951, pl. 16:c (A). B. Cohen, Marsyas 15, 1970-1971, pl. 4:6. Agora 21, p. 12, cat. no. C 6, pl. 4, C 6. M. Kilmer, Greek Erotica on Attic Red-Figure Vases, ... Agora 30 319 P 7690 P 8890 P 24142 P 2574 P 20026 P 23527 G 6:3 ... 500 B.C ... Agora 21, p. 12, cat. no. C 6, pl. 4, C 6 ... Beazley, CB iii, p. 30, note 2 ... J.D. Beazley, Some Attic Vases in the Cyprus Museum, Proceedings of the British Academy 33, London 1948, p. 30 |
Profile complete. Mended with the missing pieces restored in plaster and painted, notably most of one side of the bowl, about half of the other, both handles. H. 0.077; rest. diam. at rim 0.185; diam ... Ca. 500 B.C ... Thompson, AJA 37, 1933, p. 293, fig. 4 (I); G. ... Vanderpool, Hesperia 15, 1946, p. 282, cat. no. 40, pls. 31, 32; M. ... Shapiro, AJA 88, 1984, pp. 391--392. In CB iii, p. 30, note 2, Beazley suggested that the animal with the long bushy tail on Side A is a marten, an animal that seems to have been partly domesticated in Greek and Roman times in order to keep mice and rats away (Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th ed., vol. 17, 1910--1911, pp. 785--786, s.v. marten).
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