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Payne, Humfry
Necrocorinthia: a study of Corinthian art in the Archaic period — Oxford, 1931

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.8577#0325
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CATALOGUE OF MIDDLE CORINTHIAN VASES

305

lie

835 Syracuse from Gela (Mon. Ant. xvii, 6, vignette,
and fig. 16). Fig. 140 bis. More exact drawing
than the preceding; very near to the plates nos.
I0S4> 5 and perhaps from the same hand.

Continuation of the above, but with little or no C.
filling ornament. End of the middle Corinthian
period. Animals &c. unless otherwise stated.
Munich 319 (S.-H. pi. 10). Panther, siren. Cf. the 853

Fig. 140 bis. No. 835; from Mon. Ant. xvii.

Central motive flanked by sirens:
835 a Frankfurt (Schaal pi. 6 e). In centre, woman.

836 Yonder Wreyland, Torr Coll. Detail fig. 44 c,
made from a drawing by Prof. Beazley. In centre,

837 padded dancer. Cambridge (Gardner pi. 4, 36;
Buschor2 fig. 42). As last, but he holds a jug.

838,9 Winchester. Padded (?) man, not dancing. Bonn,
840 as no. 836. Delos (Dugas pi. 27, 346). In centre,
rosettes.

857,8

841
842
842 a

843

844

845
846

847
848

849

85O

851
852

With various motives. Style and patterns as in
821 ff.

Athens 971 (C.C. pi. 22, 487). Lions, eagle.
Hague (C.V.A. pi. 6, 2). Cock, hare, panther.
Moscow (Jahrbuch 1927, 307 figs. 6-8: the same
as Roscher i, 2139 (Furtwangler)?). Herakles and
the lion. Leningrad (?) (Bull. Arch. Comm. 1910,
159, pi.). A running man apparently throwing
a stone at a sphinx. Apparently by the same hand
as no. 836. Close also to the last. Athens 969
(C.C. 488). Male heads. Athens 968 (C.C. 485)
and 282 (C.C. 478); both from Tanagra. Panthers,
sphinx, griffon. Louvre A 467, from Rhodes
(Salzmann pi. 40,1). Boread. Delos (Dugas pi. 28,
356). Boread. Oxford 1896. 42. Detail pi. 30, 5
(J.H.S. 1904, 297; Radet, Cybebe fig. 18). Artemis
with swans, almost all modern; at back, panther.
Berlin 1092, from Nola (Genick, Gr. Keramik,
pi. 40, 4). Patterns of mouth, rim, shoulder, and
handle identical with those of the small vases of
the lion group (nos. 538-63 b), and unquestionably
from the same workshop as these. Floral ornament,
cf. fig. 53 c. Delos (Dugas pi. 27, 341). Floral.

White-dot style :

Delos (Dugas pi. 27, 350). Panthers.

plates nos. 1054, 5 by the same hand. Munich 323 854
(S.-H. pi. 9). Pegasi. Bonn 335, horseman and 855
Pegasus protome. Syracuse, from Megara Hyblaea 856
Mon. Ant. i, 845 and pi. 5, 1). Floral (cf. fig. 55 g)
between panthers. Berlin 1089, from Nola. New
York 06. 1021. 20, from Greece (Coll. Canessa 55,
210; Le Musee iii, 5 fig. 14; Baur, Centaurs 124,
310, classified as Italo-Ionic or Etruscan). Herakles
attacking a centaur. Close to nos. 842 a, 843.

As above, but on mouth concentric circles:

Athens 333 (C.C.490 pi.22). Boread. Berlin 3983, 859,60
from Pegae (Radet, Cybebe fig. 20). Artemis with

goats. Dresden ZV 1676, from Laurion (Shroder, 860 a
Sport im Altertum pi. 104). Siren between lions.

PYXIS WITH CONCAVE SIDES.

No. 652, placed in the early Corinthian catalogue,

may belong to the middle period; the following,

however, is certainly of sixth century date, and is the

latest vase of the shape known to me 0-

Louvre A 432, from Rhodes. Strongly concave 860 b

sides. On lid, double palmette chain (cf. fig. 67b);

on body, sphinxes, panthers, &c, and cross of four

lotuses, rendered in the same style as the ornaments

on nos. 1295, 1330, 1351 and ff.; perhaps, therefore,

late Corinthian.

PYXIDES WITH CONVEX SIDES, WITHOUT
HANDLES

The shape displaces the concave-sided pyxis in the
sixth century (cf. on no. 668).
With animals &c. Nos. 861-4 by the Dodwell
painter, named after no. 861; for other vases by the
same artist, see p. 63.

Munich 327, brought by Dodwell from Mertese, 861 -f~

A.

3575

1 For a variant form introduced under Attic influence in the sixth century, see nos. 1504, 5.

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