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Hogarth, David G.; Smith, Cecil Harcourt [Mitarb.]
Excavations at Ephesus: the archaic Artemisia: Text — London, 1908

DOI Seite / Zitierlink:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.4945#0199

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188 The Archaic Artemisia oe Ephesus.

b. Spheroids without blossom finials.—Various types, which include the
great bulk of the whole Pin class.

Conical.—About 30 specimens [7 from Basis].

xxxiv. With knob-finial and plain or horizontally fluted sphere.

14 20 21
23,24,'26! Without knob-finial, plain or with circular moulding. Two large plain

xxxiii. heads of this type (H. '031 and -020), found in the W. area, are so heavy and
9,31,32; solid that they are perhaps to be regarded rather as small mace-heads or finials
13,15,16, °f ivory furniture than as pin-heads. These have square, not circular, sockets
17,18,25, for ,-he shaft.
27.

Globular.
xxxiii. Plain; with unusually thick shaft (broken) made in one piece. This

30

specimen may also be a broken finial from some object of furniture.
xxxiii. Incised leaf or "bat-wing" pattern filled with white. Very fine polished

18

brown ivory. This unique specimen was found in the S.W. drainage-sump

(p. 32), having probably been overlooked in the sieves and washed down from

the central area. Compare the pattern on gold plaques from Mycenae (Myc,

p. 170).

xxxiii. Plain ; generally of small size ; several specimens.

33

xxxiii. Ribbed or otherwise moulded ; small and numerous.

Whorl-shaped ; two specimens, bored right through; perhaps true whorls,

15, 27. not pin-heads.

xxxiii. With horizontal line-moulding and cup-shaped finial—a degraded form

21; of the blossom-finial.
xxxiv.

Cylindrical.

xxxiv. A class consisting of 14 specimens [11 from Basis], all of rather rough

2 9- workmanship. The cylinders have horizontal flutings and terminate above in
a conical cap, with vertical ribbing. In some specimens incisions are cut at
right angles across the horizontal fluting. This type, in its most developed
forms, should be compared with a gold type (v. 29), and is perhaps equally
due to imitation of the cista mystica.

Two specimens (nos. 2, 3) have heads not properly cylindrical, but roughly
squared.

xxxiv. c. Upper part of needle-like shaft moulded in various ways, generally with

1221229-' P^am mc'sec* bands ; and sometimes surmounted by small knob. Mostly small
32. and fine pins. 3 1 specs. [8 from Basis.]
 
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