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[Agora Publication Page] Agora 30, s. 338, p. 319

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

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 1411

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).