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

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.4945#0214

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Terracotta, Glazed Ware and Glass. 203

II. Glazed Pastes.

A. Amulets (pendants /).

xliv. 1. Head of Bes, complete but for feather-crown ; glaze perished, and only soft,

white core remaining. Back quite flat. H. "065. Evidently an affix or pendant.
[S.W. corner of the Primitive area.]
xliv. 2. Male figure, standing on a base with foot advanced and playing double

pipe ; nude except for wig. The figure is in white ware (perished blue ?) with
hard vitreous surface, which shows remains of brownish pigment. Hole for
suspension in the back support. H. '051. This figure is of a common
Xaukratite type. (Cp. Petrie, Naukratis, i., pi. ii. 7.) [Found in S.W. corner
of the Primitive area, close to foundations of D south cella wall, sunk here
through the Primitive stratum.]
xliv. 12. Hippopotamus; hinder part only, glaze perished. Small pendant of a type

common at the S. (Egyptian) end of the site of Naukratis. [Basis]

B. Whorls; lotus pattern; yellow (originally green?) petals in relief on blue
(now white) ground. [Both within and without Basis.] Three types :—

xliv. 8. With flat base; 7 specs., all from outside Basis. H. from "022 to •009.

Largest D. "031.
xliv.5,9. Double; many specs., some more squat than others. H. from '027, and

D. from -023 (cp. Her., ii., p. 37'3, no. 58).
xliv. 4. Elongated cylindrical; 2 specs. L. -028.

C. Beads.

Soft core and dull glaze, brown or blue-black ; striped and pierced
vertically,
xlv. 7-9, Three-cornered (" cocked-hat " shape), with boil-like protuberances at each

18' ' corner: the brown or black stripes encircle the protuberances. The paste in
the intervals, being soft, has perished and left the glazed stripes standing out in
relief. Possibly the white was originally a yellow, which has survived on some
examples. 50 specs. [35 Basis.] Largest D. '025.

This peculiar type of bead was found at Hissarlik (cp. Ilios Schliem., p. 429,
no. 551), and also in the Aeginetan temple deposit (Aphaia, pi. 118, nos. 1-3).
A bronze fibula figured by Martha (p. 63, fig. 51) has a thickened bow whose
protuberance shows "eyes" which strikingly recall these beads, and suggest
that (like amber pieces described below, p. 214) the latter were ornaments
of fibula-bows,
xlv. 2,10, Circular, like the preceding in every respect, except that the protuberances

11, 15. 2 I) 2
 
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