Athenian Black Glass Pottery - A View From The West
Athenian Black Glass Pottery - A View From The West
Athenian Black Glass Pottery - A View From The West
2014
Carla Antonaccio
Duke University
Recommended Citation
Walsh, J. St. P. and Antonaccio, C., "Athenian Black Gloss Pottery: A View from the West." Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 33, 2014:
47–67. doi: 10.1111/ojoa.12026
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Art at Chapman University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Art
Faculty Articles and Research by an authorized administrator of Chapman University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact
laughtin@chapman.edu.
Athenian Black Glass Pottery: A View from the West
Comments
This is the accepted version of the following article:
Walsh, J. St. P. and Antonaccio, C. (2014), Athenian Black Gloss Pottery: A View from the West.Oxford Journal
of Archaeology, 33: 47–67. DOI: 10.1111/ojoa.12026.
Copyright
Wiley
SUMMARY
Excavation of archaic Morgantina (ca. 700-450 BCE), Sicily, has brought to light a significant pattern
in the distribution of imported Greek pottery. This pattern, which shows a preference for imports
with features that referred to metal vessels, is echoed at sites around the western Mediterranean.
We argue that the preference for certain types was communicated back to Greek producers, and
that it also reflects the particular local interests of non-Greeks, who associated metallic features not
only with wealth, but also with their own ancestral traditions.
INTRODUCTION
This article presents results of our collaborative work on the settlement on the Cittadella hill
at Morgantina, in east-central Sicily, during the period of ca. 700-450 BCE.1 Our ceramics data from
the site bear particularly on the relationship between pottery producers in Athens and consumers in
Italy and further west. The occurrence of certain shapes at Morgantina, especially in black gloss
ware, was much more pronounced than in their home market. This fact, in addition to certain
aspects of the design of those shapes, suggests local expressions of preference, and implies a
system of feedback that signalled to Athenian manufacturers which kinds of vases were desired by
consumers in western markets. Foreign preferences stimulated Attic production and export of types
whose forms referred to features found in traditional Italic shapes. The signalling system also seems
to have spurred the creation at Athens of new pottery types for Sicilians and other western
Mediterranean populations. It seems clear that ancient consumers in Sicily and elsewhere in Italy
and the West were interested in shapes with features that imitated or referred to metalware.2 The
2
importation of pottery vessels that made references to metal, and carried ancestral or traditional
traits, might have been motivated by the possibility that those features could reward their non-
Greek buyers by conferring greater status within local contexts of elite or communal commensality.
Likewise, producers who adapted to supply this demand could find greater profit.
supporting evidence, which spans the Mediterranean basin, as well as by the wide range of scholarly
approaches to the material. We begin by introducing the Athenian shapes found at Morgantina that
first drew our attention to the phenomenon of long-distance consumer feedback, and which seem
to have focused on metal prototypes. We will then examine the specific features of those vases that
are reminiscent of metallic prototypes and/or display affinities with longstanding Italic pottery
traditions, both of which we identify as desirable to Sicilian consumers. We will contemplate the
prestige associated with those features, and the indigenous social contexts in which the use of such
pottery would allow their owners to accrue greater status. At the same time, we will emphasize the
benefits offered to Athenian potters by the chance to cater to specific desires of their overseas
consumers.
PRESENTATION OF SHAPES
The primary type of pottery used as evidence is the ware manufactured in Athens that was
decorated with a black slip, or gloss, which formed the vast majority of exported vessels. Both
figured and non-figured types are included in this group. Morgantina was captured and apparently
destroyed in 459 BCE, during a period of struggle between the indigenous Sikel population and
Greek communities on the coasts (Diod. Sic. XI.78.5, Sjöqvist 1973, Walsh 2011-12). Attic wares
were dominant among imports for the last fifty years of Morgantina’s habitation. Almost 2,000
diagnostic fragments of Attic black gloss (ABG) and approximately 160 sherds of figured Athenian
pottery have been catalogued from the excavated residential areas of the settlement. In addition,
one-third of the imported pottery (83 of 268 vessels) found in the published archaic tombs of the
3
sixth and fifth centuries originated in Athens (Lyons 1995, 33-38). While Attic black gloss was first
imported to Morgantina as early as 550, half of the diagnostic pottery had production dates
An ABG shape that appeared with some regularity in the Archaic deposits was the stemless
cup known as the Cástulo cup. The earliest publication to draw attention to the type was that of
Villard in 1959 (7-8, with profile drawings), who noted their presence in a Punic necropolis at
Gouraya, on the central coast of Algeria.3 Shefton later named the cup for Cástulo, a site in Spain
where it was found in extraordinary numbers – over 300 examples (in Pellicer 1982 and Shefton
1997; see also, more recently, Domínguez and Sánchez 2001, 444-446). Many others have been
recovered at sites in the region. At the Iberian sanctuary of Cancho Roano, in Extremadura, for
example, 86% of published Attic sherds came from Cástulo cups, which made up 370 examples
(Gracia 2003). This shape is characterized by noticeably thick walls, a concave outer lip profile, and a
sharp offset about 2 cm below the inside of the rim. The vertical part of the foot exterior is usually
decorated with a scraped groove above and torus profile below; the foot is typically unslipped
except on its top and interior. Shefton (1997, 88) argued that the weight and heft of the Cástulo cup
could be explained by its function as a vessel intended for export, and indeed, the shape is found
throughout the western Mediterranean. According to him, the thickness of the walls and lack of a
stem would ensure that the cups would reach their far-off destinations in one piece. The type was
dated to ca. 470-450 by reference to an example from the Athenian Agora volume of Sparkes and
Talcott (1970), Agora XII.471, though Spanish archaeologists have given some examples a date as
late as the beginning of the fourth century (Domínguez and Sánchez 2001).4
Antonaccio has published a nearly intact example of this shape from the archaic settlement
at Morgantina (Inv. 80-576, Figures 1 and 2; Antonaccio 2003). The cup was found in a monumental,
probably public building, in the same context as a red-figure krater attributed to Euthymides (Neils
4
1995). This well-preserved specimen led us to look carefully for other Cástulo cups; the rims are
easy to identify due to their distinctive offset. One hundred twenty fragments of stemless cups have
been identified in the archaic settlement excavations to date, and over 80% of stemless rims (70 out
of 87) can be identified as Cástulo cups.5 In the earliest phases of the succeeding classical
settlement, stemless cups were the second most common shape in ABG, and almost half of these
were Cástulo cups (13 out of 27 rims; Walsh 2006, 141-142). A study in preparation for publication
by Walsh of data from 233 Greek and non-Greek sites in Portugal, Spain, France, Switzerland, and
Germany where Greek vases have been found showed 34 settlements with at least one Cástulo cup.
Cup-skyphoi
Our investigation of cups displaying sharp offsets inside the rim led to the identification of a
second and related type. This shape also had an offset inside, about 2 cm below the rim, but with a
significantly deeper profile than a stemless cup, and often a concave moulding on the rim exterior
(Figures 3 and 4). These were cup-skyphoi of a type not illustrated by drawings in Sparkes and
Talcott’s publication.6 Ninety-three diagnostic cup-skyphos fragments were found in the archaic
settlement at Morgantina, and another fourteen fragments are probably attributable to this shape.
One possible example (it may be a Cástulo instead; Inv. 90-1, Figure 5) was executed in the red-
figure technique.7 The cup-skyphos type with concave or straight rim exterior and offset inside
appeared in a variety of sizes at Morgantina, from under 7 cm in height and 10 cm in rim diameter
(Inv. 95-137) to enormous versions with diameters up to 23 cm (95-128). In all examples where the
foot was preserved, it was moulded, reserved on at least part (or even all) of the foot exterior, with a
scraped groove ranging from a few millimetres to almost a centimetre in height. Under the foot, the
resting surface and underside were reserved, while the foot interior was glossed. Added red (miltos)
is often found on the reserved parts of the foot, and a concentric circle-and-dot motif painted at the
centre of the underside. The points of attachment for canted bell handles were placed so that their
5
top part was just below the ridge whence the concave flaring of the rim springs. The highest parts of
the handles did not rise above the rim. The handles were uniformly glossed on the exterior and
reserved on the interior, with a reserved handle panel. The lip was often thickened, especially on
Following Shefton’s designation of the thick-walled stemless cup with offset inside as the
Cástulo cup, we refer to the cup-skyphos with concave lip and offset inside as the Morgantina cup.
This rubric seems appropriate given the high concentration of this type at the site, although as with
the Cástulo, the Morgantina cup was actually distributed across the western Mediterranean (see
below). Similar to the Cástulo cup, the offset on a Morgantina cup’s interior is usually found
between two and three cm below the rim edge. The offset is up to four or five mm deep, clearly
visible to the viewer of one of these vessels. Unlike the Cástulo cup, however, the Morgantina cup
did not have noticeably thicker walls than other cup-skyphoi, except at the offset itself. Aside from
the reserved areas already noted on the foot and handles, the rest of the vessel was completely
glossed. Like several other ABG shapes popular at Morgantina and elsewhere, this type was
In sum, at least 86 Cástulo and Morgantina cup rims have been identified in the material
from Morgantina’s sixth-fifth century settlement. As will be seen shortly, it appears that this
number is greater than at other Italian sites, especially on Sicily. The appearance of similar features
on such a large proportion of both stemless cups and cup-skyphoi thus was striking, and seems
strongly indicative of both a local preference for those features and a market that was attractive to
Athenian workshops: Morgantina had interest and purchasing power, a point confirmed by the very
Other sites
Similar vessels have been found in several other parts of Sicily and further afield. At
Selinous, twenty stemless cups with offset inside (“orlo staccato”) were published from the
6
Manicalunga necropolis (Kustermann Graf 2002, 276 and Tav. CXXII). This number apparently
includes cup-skyphoi, nine of which (Group 1a) are represented by a drawing of one example (inv.
no. 100/O360). All nine had a rim diameter of around 15 cm, perhaps evidence of a set, or a single
workshop supplying the buyers for Selinous (Kustermann Graf dated the Selinous cups to the
second or third quarter of the fifth century).8 We note that two more cup-skyphoi from the
Manicalunga tombs had flaring concave lips, a preference to which we will return below.9
Monte Maranfusa, a small site located in the Belice river valley of western Sicily, not far
inland from Selinous, yielded stemless cups and perhaps also cup-skyphoi with sharp offsets inside
(Del Vais 2004, 336-338 and fig. 282). The cup-skyphoi that were preserved (G89-96) uniformly
featured flaring concave rims.10 Two vessels (G97 and G98) were certainly stemless cups; another (G
99) was not well-preserved enough to determine the depth of its bowl so that it could be identified
as either stemless or cup-skyphos. These comparanda, which reflect the phenomena we recognized
at Morgantina, but on a smaller scale, are particularly important because the site is a uniquely well-
corresponding pattern in western Sicily to that found in the centre at Morgantina. Likewise, the
Punic island settlement of Mozia (off the west coast of Sicily) preserved at least one probable
example of an offset-inside cup-skyphos. Michelini (2002, 166 and Tav. 1) referred to this example
as the sole representative of her Type 2, identifying it as a stemless cup (and thus a Cástulo), though
the profile drawing seems deeper and closer to the Morgantina cup shape.
Turning to the Italian peninsula, vessels similar to the Morgantina type were discovered in
significant numbers at Gravisca, the port of the Etruscan city Tarquinia, which was well connected
to Athens by trade links (Demetriou 2013). Valentini’s Type 10 cup, defined by a flaring rim and
sharp edge inside, was relatively common, represented by 85 fragments, of which 49 were rims
(1993, 24-25 and Tav. 4-5). Valentini divided the type into four subcategories, with Type 10A (34
fragments at Gravisca) most similar to the relatively broad but shallow profiles typically
encountered at Morgantina. Type 10A had the widest rim diameter of the Gravisca cup-skyphoi, up
7
to a maximum of 19.3 cm, while the other subtypes could be as small as 13 cm. Valentini dated
Types 10B-D by their contexts to around 480, while 10A was placed around 450.
Three sites in southern Italy also revealed Morgantina cups: Elea, Vico Equense, and
Kaulonia. At Elea, Gassner (2003, 52-53) created a typology for ABG cup-skyphoi with offset rim and
with concave rim. She referred to these as “Schalenskyphos 4,” of which there were three
catalogued examples. Gassner’s “Fuβlose Schale mit abgesetztem Rand” (2003, 48-50) should also
be included in this discussion. While she defined that form as a stemless cup – in fact, the type “mit
abgesetztem Rand” appears to be equivalent to the Cástulo cup form, though she did not cite any
Iberian comparanda – her first two examples (subtype 1) appear to be cup-skyphoi instead.11 A
cemetery at Vico Equense, on the south coast of the Bay of Naples, revealed two Morgantina cups,
one with a thickened rim, and the other relatively thin, as well as two Cástulo cups (Necropoli di via
Nicotera black gloss nos. 29-30; Bonghi Jovino 1982, 69-70, Tav. 37 1.2 and 1.5, Tav. 111.2 and 111.5).
Finally, Tréziny (1989, 55-59 and fig. 36-37) published profiles of at least two offset-inside rims from
Athenian cup-skyphoi found at Kaulonia (numbers 110 and 114 in his catalogue), on the Ionian Sea
coast, together with another four rims with concave lips. He also published seven examples of
The most complete comparanda for the Morgantina cup type in ABG – perhaps the finest
examples anywhere in the Mediterranean – were two cups found in an indigenous necropolis at Los
Castellones de Ceal, in Andalucía (Museo Arqueológico de Jaén, one numbered A-112 (Figure 6),
the other without a number; Blanco 1959, 111; Trías 1967, 483 and fig. 144-145; Domínguez and
Sánchez 2001, 234 and figs. 129-130). Trías gave them a date in the first half of the fourth century,
which seems likely to us. Other examples appeared in red-figure and black gloss at Ullastret in
Catalonia (Picazo 1977, 62-68 and 106-107; see esp. no. 178, fig. 1.7 and no. 176-177, pl. XVII; also n.
6-7 above).
Finally, two cups in metal can provide points of comparison with the Morgantina cup, and a
third seems very close to the Cástulo type. First is the well-known silver cup-skyphos in the
8
Ashmolean collection (1885.486). This vessel, which has a concave lip and offset inside, was found
at Nymphaion, site of the famous kurgan burials, in the Ukraine. Strong (1966, 85) specifically
compared its shape to “clay vessels...around 400 BC.” Oliver (1977, 31) concurred: “[it] can easily be
matched in pottery.” The other two vessels, a cup-skyphos and a stemless cup (both bronze;
Figures 7 and 8), were also from the late fifth century, and were found as part of a hoard at
Votonosios, near Metsovo in Epiros, in 1939 (Verdélis 1949, esp. 19 n. 2; Petsa 1952). The hoard’s
precise ancient context is unfortunately not known, since it was discovered during road work
(Vocotopoulou 1975, 730, though see also 786, where she suggests that the vases might have
formed part of a votive deposit). These two examples, today in Ioannina, had sharply concave rims
(Vocotopoulou 1975, 761-764). The stemless cup has a decisive offset inside, while the cup-skyphos
appears to have a small but visible raised line where the lip joins the body.13 The stemless cup is
possibly a unique comparandum in metal for the Cástulo type, though the handles indicate a late
date.
LOCAL TRADITIONS
We have already suggested above that some of the attributes of imported ABG at these
(and other) western Mediterranean sites can be linked to both local ceramic and metalworking
traditions. In Sicily, local traditions in the design of vases used for feasting seem to have existed
perhaps even from the Early Bronze Age. They continued into the Iron Age and the period of
contact and interaction between indigenous groups and Greeks, and beyond. Although few metal
vessels survive relative to the enormous quantity of pottery, it will become clear that Sicilian
societies, as elsewhere in Italy, gave primacy to metal vessels. Certain design characteristics show
unequivocally that features of metal vessels were imitated in clay. Among these attributes are
carinated profiles (and other ridges; see below), high-swung handles, clay “rivets,” and other
vestiges of metal vessel predecessors that often had deep local histories.
9
Forming vases out of metal required a variety of techniques quite different from those used
in shaping clay, meaning that the appearance of metal features in clay is not a function of potting
traditions having an effect on metalwork (Knudsen 1961, 14-44). Before the sixth century BCE,
vases were typically hammered out of lumps of metal; later, casting and lathing sections of a vase
and hammering, welding, or riveting the sections together became the norm (Hill 1947, 249-252). At
the points where joins were made – often where countering curves, difficult to produce through
casting, met – the surface of the vessel would thicken through hammering or soldering. The
thickened area would often be sharpened by hammering into a decorative ridge, or carination.14
Carinations, although found in ceramics, are therefore a feature specifically associated with metal
vessels. Other features found quite often on metal cups and bowls include delicate high-swung
strap handles, false rivets, and ostentatiously flaring rims, are more viable in the relatively flexible
and resilient medium of metal than in easily fractured clay (Vickers et al. 1986). Thus, the
appearance in pottery of features suited to metalwork, represents a choice on the part of potters,
driven by the preferences of consumers (a point already signalled by Lamb in 1929 (186)). These
preferences were not simply the mirror of what was happening in the home market: a thorough
study of findspots for Athenian figured cup-skyphoi revealed that over 80% were found outside of
In the Archaic and Classical period, it is very easy to find numerous examples of carinated
rims and high-swung handles on Iron Age shapes in Italy and Sicily, especially on cups, but
extending to larger shapes such as basins. There were examples from Morgantina in both the
settlement and cemeteries, and the deep influence of metal can be found in the Archaic but locally
made vessels that co-existed with Greek imports (and colonial imitations). Dipper cups with a
carinated profile and high-swung handle were very popular, and appeared in a variety of fabrics and
decorative schemes, from impasto with burnished surface to the local ‘Siculo-geometric’ fabric with
matt-painted decoration. Some seventh-century examples were clearly imitating metal in their
dark, thin, hard fabrics with sharp carinations and a dark slip. There were also overt imitations of
10
larger metal vessels of Greek design, for example dinoi with pendant ring handles that are imitated
in cooking wares. In general, then, the preference for carinated shapes was quite pronounced.15
That such patterns transcend Morgantina, or indeed Sicily, can be seen in the prevalence of
these design features in Italy as well from the Neolithic to the Archaic period. The clearest examples
can be found in Etruria, where the Etruscan shapes known as Nikosthenic amphorai and kyathoi
appeared in Athenian fabrics. As Eisman pointed out, these vessels are clear examples of a pattern
of feedback between Etruria and Greece, such that examples of the Etruscan prototypes must have
travelled to Athens to be copied. Athenian potters must have recognized that Etruscan consumers
(specifically at Caere, in the case of the Nikosthenic amphorai, which have mostly been found there)
might be doubly pleased by the appearance of desirable Greek decorations on their own
The precise mechanisms of the feedback that was responsible for the shapes and their
present evidence (Gill 1994, Arafat and Morgan 1994, Lawall 1998). Gill (1994, 102), in particular,
criticized Eisman’s “ceramo-centric” model, arguing that metal vessels would have been far more
important in trade from Etruria to Greece than clay.16 Indeed, both the Nikosthenic amphora and
kyathos have metallic features which make it likely that they took some, if not all their cues from
metal antecedents.17 Even if there was no specific metal prototype of the Nikosthenic amphora,
though, these features were deployed precisely because they copied the kinds of features found on
metal vases (as has already been shown to have happened throughout Italy and Sicily). Likewise,
the high-swung handles of kyathoi seem not only metallic, but also in keeping with Italic tradition.
In addition, kyathos handles are occasionally decorated with plastic decoration: a rivet-like knob or
twisted cone on the top, or an “appliqué,” e.g., a palmette or ivy leaf (as on New York 21.88.93 or
Elsewhere in Italy, in the region of Puglia (ancient Daunia), we can point to the olla (also
known by the name troxella or nestoris), a shape with a rounded bottom, rather like the Greek dinos
11
but a sharply articulated and thin horizontal rim and, often, vertical handles or plastic attachment.
Remarkably, this type was imitated in red figure by Polygnotos, the early classical Athenian painter,
who decorated a pair of these vessels now in the Getty Museum (inv. 81.AE.183.1-7) with figures on
the rim and a black gloss body. As the findspot(s) of this pair are unfortunately not known, we
cannot be certain that they came from a South Italian market, but it seems likely that they were
commissioned by an Italian (Daunian) buyer, or at least that they were intended for such a buyer,
who selected an ancestral shape but – in a transcultural move – wanted it to be decorated it with
Attic red-figure imagery on a black surface (Antonaccio 2005 with references). Related objects
would be another pair of vases unique in shape, called “fennel stands” but of unknown use, now in
the Metropolitan Museum of Art (inv. 65.11.5-14 and 1980.537). These objects, like the
transculturated Daunian vessels, were decorated in red figure, and are attributed to the Euergides
Painter. The potter may have been Nikosthenes or, tantalizingly, Sikanos (according to von
Bothmer), emphasizing the possible South Italian connection (True 2006: 240-257, cat. no. 72, 73; S.
Hemingway in Padgett, ed. 2003: 280-81, no. 71 = MMA 65.11.14). These objects have no known
parallels in the Attic repertoire but the shape, again, derives from an Etruscan context.
MEANINGS
BG and metal
Vickers, Francis, and Gill proposed the indebtedness of Greek, and especially Attic, sixth-
and fifth-century pottery to metalwork. Their efforts were motivated by a desire to clarify the
relative economic value of metal vessels to ceramic vessels in antiquity, and to counter prevailing
views of Attic figured wares in particular as artistic masterpieces (Vickers and Gill 1994, 33-54).
While the value of a metal cup closely correlated with its weight, it also had value as an object of
display that could confer status on its owner (Vickers and Gill 1994, 40, relying on Pollux 10.85).
Hence, according to these authors, the prestige of metal explains the shapes and decoration of Attic
12
pottery: they imitate gold and silver. While the work of Vickers and Gill has been divisive regarding
the value of ceramic vessels in antiquity, it tends to bolster our case for the importance of metal
vases and the relationship between their appearance and some design features of the ABG found at
Morgantina and elsewhere. We, however, also discern the very important aspect of the reinforcing
qualities of time and identity– what we might call ancestral preferences or values – in the reasons
for choosing or valuing some of these designs, not just the inherent priority of metal's economic
value for prestige. Although black gloss did not mimic precious metal such as tarnished silver
(Boardman 1987), the semi-reflective quality of this surface seems clearly responsible for the
extraordinary popularity across the classical Mediterranean of wares with that surface finishing. If
they did not reproduce metal exactly, their sheen was at least “metallic,” and the features of their
Etruscan-style kantharoi
A comparison of several different kinds of vessels will help illustrate further the importance
of metal references on ceramic vases, and especially how vases with those references demonstrate
the links of trade and communication between Greece and the rest of the Mediterranean, especially
Italy. One vessel type produced at Athens (and elsewhere in Greece) that not only had origins in
Etruria, but specifically in an Etruscan metal shape was a kind of kantharos. Sixty years ago, Courbin
(1953; see also Brijder 1988) showed that the kantharos name, typically used for a deep cup with
two vertical handles and a foot, actually described two different kinds of vessels that were derived
from wholly separate traditions. In both cases, however, these types were ultimately related to
metal precursors. The type of kantharos that was derived from Etruscan models featured high-
swung handles that rose well above the rim and a sharp carination where the curve of the shallow
bowl met the tall lipless rim. According to Courbin, this shape, which appeared in Greek ceramic
production as early as 580, copied almost exactly a shape that appeared in bucchero by the third
quarter of the seventh century. The examples made in Etruria often include applied decoration in
13
the form of a row of “rivets” running around the carination, testifying to the ceramic vessel’s debt to
a metal prototype, or at least the desire to make it seem metallic. The shape became popular in
Athens and especially Boeotia (where it became favored for inclusion with burials). The Etruscan-
style kantharos soon became so closely connected to the luxuries of the symposium in Athens that
it was a common part of the Athenian iconography of Dionysos and Herakles at banquet by the
middle of the sixth century (Carpenter 1986). Perhaps, too, it could be suggested that the kantharos
is Dionysos’ cup because both it and he were foreign, seen by Athenians as originating outside the
Greek world. It is in this context that Kritias’ comments about the importance of Etruscan metal (n.
16 above) are best taken. A particularly fine example of the Etruscan-style kantharos in metal is a
silver cup of Greek manufacture with gold-figure decoration that was found in a Thracian tumulus at
Duvanli in Bulgaria (today in the Plovdiv Archaeological Museum; Vickers, Impey, and Allan 1986,
Plate 4).
Metal vessels from Etruria were not the only ones that made their way into the ceramic
medium at home and at Athens. Miller has extensively described the appearance in Attic black gloss
Achaemenid Persian metal shapes (Miller 1993 and 1997, esp. Ch. 6; also Strong 1966, 75-77 and
Sparkes and Talcott 1970, 15 n. 29). While earlier scholars claimed that the emergence of the
“Achaemenidizing” cups and bowls at Athens was caused by the influx of loot taken at Plataia in
479, Miller argued that the beginning of adoption and adaptation dated earlier -- to the later part of
the sixth century (Miller 1993, 137-138). Using Achaemenid vessels, or vessels that were clearly
Achaemenid in style, according to Miller, would have been recognized by Athenians as an important
marker of elite status, in Greece or elsewhere. We note that Berlin and Lynch (2002) raised a
across the Mediterranean, i.e. Atticizing Achaemenid pottery found at Persian-period Troy.
Greek-style kantharoi
14
The other type of kantharos distinguished by Courbin, with smaller handles than the
Etruscan type, which do not rise above the rim, had Greek origins. One Attic cup in this shape (95-
180; Figure 9) has also been found in the archaic settlement at Morgantina. The cup, with a rim
diameter of about 14 cm, was decorated with an extremely glossy slip, beautifully applied, but
misfired gray or greenish in certain areas. It had an everted rim and two small vertical handles rising
to join the rim, similar to Agora XII.625, dating ca. 550. Brann showed that comparable cups with
only one vertical handle, but a similar profile, could be found as early as the Protogeometric period.
She also noted the influence of metal: “[In the seventh century, t]he cups look increasingly as if
copied from metal models, the fabric being thin and firm and the glaze firm, glossy and
approaching classical black glaze” (1962, 52-53). Brann felt sure that one particular two-handled cup
(Agora VIII.152) had a metal prototype, as a very similar vessel was depicted on the Protoattic
Eleusis amphora (1962, 49). At the same time, the shape of 95-180’s handles are reminiscent of two
Villasmundo, near Syracuse, that was in use from the eighth through the sixth centuries (Voza
1973b, 58-59). While the kyathoi lack an everted rim like 95-180, their overall forms present striking
similarities.
The most interesting features of the kantharos found at Morgantina are reserved triangles
found on the tops of the vertical handles (Figure 10). We do not know of any published parallels for
this decoration on kantharoi, but an identical treatment is found on ABG mugs made in the fifth
century. In fact, two mugs found in a tomb less than 40 km from Morgantina, at the hellenising
indigenous site of Sabucina, also have reserved triangles on their handles.18 Two Attic examples in
the British Museum show similar treatments: one found at Rhodes with red-figure decoration (BM E
568) has a reserved handle like the two from Sabucina, while another found at Capua has an
extraordinary frieze of stamped figures and an actual moulded double-handle (BM G90, Sparkes
1968). The stamped decorations on BM G90 – which are clearly evocative of hammered or
impressed decorations on metal vessels – were linked by Sparkes to two kantharos variants, called
15
“cantharoid kotylai” by Beazley, which were decorated with identical stamps.19 These cups (Boston
01.8023, from Naples; and Brussels A741, from Nola) have everted rims and Italian provenances.
The purpose of the handle decoration on all of the mugs and the Morgantina kantharos seems clear:
to copy the appearance of metal cups with double vertical handles that split from one another as
Consumption
Walsh (2011-12 and forthcoming) has argued elsewhere that the patterns of distribution
that have been found for imported pottery at Morgantina and other sites were the result not only of
the availability of products, but also of a complex process of decision-making. On the one hand,
buyers evaluated purely economic criteria such as price, utility, and need during each purchase. At
the same time, as other scholars have recognized, buying foreign goods requires the purchaser to
create a new set of meanings for those goods – to find a place for imports within existing social and
cultural structures. Dietler (e.g., 1999, 2010) adopted the term “consumption” to describe such
transformations of meaning. The development of new meanings was, of course, conditioned by the
very structures into which the imported objects had to be integrated. The foreignness of an import
carries with it the implication that these goods were probably, on some level at least, prestigious
novelties. The added value connected to consumption of an imported vase is unlikely to have been
related to its functional aspects, as local copies could presumably mimic those qualities relatively
easily (see, for example, the single instance of an imitation Cástulo cup found at Cancho Roano
The extent to which drinking practices followed those outlined for the Greek-style drinking
party known as the symposium is not known, but there are some signs that certain sympotic
behaviors were practiced, at least by some people, at Morgantina. The monumental public building
mentioned earlier as containing an almost-intact Cástulo cup and the Euthymides krater (among
16
many other drinking vessels) was constructed in the second half of the sixth century. The four
square rooms that comprised its lower level were used for storage, and the upper rooms that are no
longer preserved might well have served for ritualized drinking (Antonaccio 1997). Graffiti on many
drinking vessels show awareness of Greek customs: on the interior of an Attic kylix, the Sikel word
“PIBE” (“Drink!”), written in the Greek alphabet; on the neck of a Lakonian krater, a Sikel female
personal name, Kupara, that could also be read as a bilingual pun (and seems to indicate a female
role in the drinking; Antonaccio and Neils 1995; Antonaccio 1999; Antonaccio 2003). Even funerary
architecture and grave goods made reference to symposia, as stonecut klinai for reclining while
dining were discovered in several chamber tombs, and pottery associated with drinking was
common (Lyons 1995). Yet differences also emerged: women were buried in tombs that had klinai,
and much of the pottery deposited is in the indigenous Siculo-Geometric tradition. Wine was not
necessarily the beverage consumed at commensal occasions – mead or hydromel are other strong
possibilities. References to Sikel language and religion indicate that there were quite active non-
Greek participants in group commensality, and the restricted range of imported shapes imply that a
different set of equipment was being used than would be expected in Athens, or even on the Sicilian
coast in Greek colonies. The selective adoption of certain shapes rather than others shows the
active expression of preference by consumers – buyers at Morgantina clearly did not want all the
shapes that were available to them. For example, they imported fewer pouring vessels, a rather
hybrid drinking assemblage must have been in use, involving a mix of imported Greek/colonial
shapes, traditional local shapes, and even traditional vessels from outside Morgantina (Antonaccio
2001; imports of indigenous ceramics in non-local fabrics and decoration is the subject of ongoing
study).
The best explanation for Sicilian interest in Athenian pottery must be sought elsewhere,
specifically in the ability of the imported vessels to transmit signals about the status of the owner to
an audience that was equipped to receive, understand, and respond to those signals in a positive
way. Bourdieu (1984) long ago noted the ways in which shared attitudes and tastes serve to
17
delineate social groups, and Neiman (1999) has shown how otherwise wastefully large expenditures
on luxuries can actually increase access to more and better mates and resources. The host of a feast
who possessed the most fashionable or “right” kinds of tableware, and who used them properly,
could be judged by guests to know the rules of elite behaviour – to be a member of the club, so to
speak – just as today, the “cultured” wealthy of the West set themselves apart from the newly rich
or merely middle-class by demonstrating their understanding of which shape of glass to use for
serving a rare and extravagantly priced variety of wine, or which fork and knife to use at a certain
point during a special meal. These largely arbitrary rules, and the equipment created to satisfy
them, help to define how status is contested and won in the public arena of commensality (Stahl
2002). In addition, hosts, or perhaps local leaders, could set a trend and increase their prestige by
innovating within this system, introducing a new type or acquiring a particularly impressive example
So how did this phenomenon of expressed preference manifest itself at Morgantina? Just as
in Etruria, we find that while there was great interest in black gloss pottery from Athens generally,
shapes that were related to ancestral or metallic forms were particularly desirable. This should
come as little surprise: consumers who wanted to gain status through the display of expensive table
wares could probably do so most effectively by using vessels that were easily associated with
existing (and long-standing) tastes. The surface finishing, carinations, offsets, and concave flaring
lips of Cástulo and Morgantina cups satisfied consumers in Sicily and elsewhere in the
Mediterranean because of their stylistic proximity to local traditions and interests. Athenian potters
and merchants of these wares responded to the demand by directing trade in vessels with the
CONCLUSION
We close our discussion by reference to one last Athenian vessel. It is a largely intact cup
found by excavators of the Athenian agora in 1996 (P32631; Camp 1999; Figure 11). It was found in
18
a refuse pit on the north side of the Eridanos River, together with other cups and some one-
handlers. Camp identified the vase as a cup-skyphos.20 It had a “molded ring foot, canted handles,
[and] offset rim inside and out,” which matches our examples of Cástulo and Morgantina cups
(Camp 1999, 274). The most unusual aspect of this Athenian specimen, however, was the graffito
incised on its underside, which Camp interpreted as the name of its owner: XENON (Figure 12).
While we cannot know if the graffito refers to its owner or maker, the possible connection of this
Athenian cup to a foreigner (xenos) living at Athens is a fascinating prospect, given our interest in
this shape and its appeal to Sicilian consumers. Some names among the potters and painters of
Athens are similarly suggestive: e.g., Amasis, Lydos (who often used the definite article with his
name, accentuating his ethnicity), Brygos, Thrax, Syriskos, and even Sikanos and Sikelos
(Robertson 1992, 137). If the cup belonged to a foreigner in Athens, perhaps he was expressing his
At the same time, the proportions of the XENON cup place it somewhere between those of
the standard cup-skyphos and stemless cup.21 The hybrid nature of the XENON cup highlights how
similar these shapes are, and it could probably be argued that the distinction between cup-skyphoi
and stemless cups is largely semantic (as suggested by Roberts and Glock, quoted earlier). On the
other hand, the fact remains that our survey of the western Mediterranean showed that Cástulo
cups were particularly concentrated in Spain, while our new type, the Morgantina cup was more
common in Sicily and Italy. It may be too soon for us to claim on the basis of current evidence that
these distribution patterns reflect more subtle differences in consumer preference and feedback,
but the possibility seems to be a strong one. In the end, the XENON cup’s hybridity can at least
stand as a kind of synecdoche for the mixture of influences on the design of Athenian cups exported
The features of the pottery studied in this paper became common – that is to say,
commercially successful – because they could be used to claim allegiance to a group: leisured
participants in commensal drinking. It is perhaps tempting to label the buyers of Athenian pottery
19
at Morgantina as being, or desiring to be, “cosmopolitan” for their interest in products from far-off
centers, but this interpretation presumes that the Athenian (or, more generally, Greek, or simply
“foreign”) origin of the cups was necessarily an important part of what made them coveted.
Probably the Athenian “brand” did carry some value, but if it were the most significant factor, a
broader and less discriminate distribution of shapes, especially those displaying images, would have
been discovered at Morgantina, as it has on the Sicilian coast. Instead, as we hope we have
demonstrated, consumer interests must be investigated from a local perspective first, in order to
Dietler has carefully examined how commensality can be used to unite or divide
participants, to maintain status among peers or define one’s peers (2001, 77). In his “diacritical”
mode of feasting (2001, 85-86), the employment of specialized equipment is one way in which
participants can set themselves apart from outsiders. While Greek use of kraters, amphorai,
oinochoai, psykters, and all sorts of cups during the symposion helped to create a sense of the
banquet as a band of brothers (as noted in frequent literary references), at Morgantina, the use of
Athenian cups that resembled traditional metal vessels, alongside shapes of various traditions in
different wares could also signal alliance between feasters. The signal that was sent emphasized a
shared cultural heritage (the shape of local vessels) and the value and prestige of metal.
Acknowledgements
The authors are indebted to their colleagues in the Morgantina expedition, especially Jenifer Neils,
for their suggestions throughout the writing of this article, and Chris Williams for his photographic
work. We are also grateful to John Camp and the staff of the Athenian Agora excavations for
making their material available for study. Any errors are the responsibility of the authors alone.
Department of Art, Chapman University, One University Drive, Orange, CA 92866, USA
20
Department of Classical Studies, Duke University, 233 Allen Building, Box 90103, Durham, NC
27708, USA
21
WORKS CITED
________. 1999. “Kupara, a Sikel nymph?” Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 129: 177-185.
________. 2001. “Ethnicity and Colonization.” In Ancient Perceptions of Greek Ethnicity. Washington,
________. 2003. “Siculo-Geometric and the Sikels: Ceramics and Identity in Eastern Sicily.” In Greek
Identity in the Western Mediterranean: Papers in Honour of Brian Shefton, K. Lomas, ed. Brill. 54-81.
ANTONACCIO, C.M. and J. NEILS. 1995. “A New Graffito from Archaic Morgantina.” Zeitschrift für
ARAFAT, K. and C. MORGAN. 1994. “Athens, Etruria and the Heuneburg. Mutual misconceptions in
the study of Greek - barbarian relations.” In Classical Greece: Ancient Histories and Modern
AUBET SEMMLER, M.E. 1989. Tartessos: Arqueología Protohistórica del Bajo Guadalquivir. Editorial
AUSA. Barcelona.
AVRAMIDOU, A. 2006. “Attic Vases in Etruria: Another View on the Divine Banquet Cup by the
BERLIN, A. and K. LYNCH. 2002. “Going Greek: Atticizing Pottery in the Achaemenid World.”
BLANCO FREIJEIRO, A. 1959. “Cerámica griega de los Castellones de Ceal.” Archivo Español de
BLÁZQUEZ, J.M. 1975. Castulo I. Acta Arqueológica Hispánica. Comisaria General del Patrimonio
BRANN, E.T.H. 1962. The Athenian Agora VIII: Late Geometric and Protoattic Pottery, Mid-8th to Late
BRIJDER. 1988. “The shapes of Etruscan bronze kantharoi from the seventh century B.C. and the
CABRERA BONET, P. and J.F. JURADO. “Comercio griego en Huelva a fines del siglo V a.C.” in Grecs
et Ibères au IVe s., Bordeaux, Revue des Etudes Anciennes 89, 149-156.
CABRERA BONET, P. and C. SÁNCHEZ-FERNÁNDEZ. 2000. “El comercio griego con el mundo
ibérico durante la época clásica.” In Los griegos en España : tras las huellas de Heracles . Museo
CAMP, J. 1999. “Excavations in the Athenian Agora, 1996 and 1997.” Hesperia 68 (3): 255–283.
CARPENTER, T. 1986. Dionysian Imagery in Archaic Greek Art: Its Development in Black-Figure Vase
CULTRARO, M. 1997. “La civiltà di Castelluccio nella zona etnea,” in Prima Sicilia, alle origini della
società siciliana, albergo dei Poveri Palermo, (18 ott.-22 dic. 1997). Palermo, Regione Siciliana
COURBIN, P. 1953. “Les origines du canthare attique archaique.” BCH 77: 322-345.
DEL VAIS, C. 2004. “La ceramica a figure nere, a figure rosse e a vernice nera.” In Monte Maranfusa:
Un insediamento nella media valle del Belice. L’Abitato indigeno, F. SPATAFORA, ed. Assessorato
Regionale dei Beni Culturali Ambientali e della Pubblica Istruzione. Palermo: 307-346.
DEMETRIOU, D. 2013. Negotiating Identity in the Ancient Mediterranean: The Archaic and Classical
Greek Colonial Encounters.” In Confini e Frontiere nella Grecità d’Occidente. Naples: Arte
tipographica. 1:475–501.
———. 2001. “Theorizing the Feast: Rituals of Consumption, Commensal Politics, and Power in
African Contexts.” In Feasts: Archaeological and Ethnographic Perspectives on Food, Politics, and
DOMÍNGUEZ, A. and C. SÁNCHEZ. 2001. Greek Pottery from the Iberian Peninsula. G.
EISMAN, M. 1974. “Nikosthenic Amphorai: The J. Paul Getty Museum Amphora.” The J. Paul Getty
ELRASHEDY, F.M. 2002. Imports of Post-Archaic Greek Pottery into Cyrenaica. BAR International
ESCACENA CARRASCO, J.L. 1993. “La Etapa Precolonial de Tartessos: Reflexiones sobre el
<<Bronce>> que nunca existió.” In Tartessos: 25 Años Despues (1968-1993). Actas del Congreso
GARCÍA MARTÍN, J.P. 2003. La distribución de ceramica griega en la contestiana ibérica: El puerto
comercial de La Illeta dels Banyets. Instituto Alicantino de cultura <<Juan Gil-Albert>>. Alicante.
GASSNER, V. 2003. Velia-Studien 2. Materielle Kultur und kulturelle Identität in Elea in spätarchish-
frühklassischer Zeit: Untersuchungen zur Gefäβ- und Baukeramik aus der Unterstadt (Grabungen 1987-
Wissenschaften. Vienna.
GILL, D.W.J. 1994. “Positivism, Pots, and Long-Distance Trade.” In Classical Greece: Ancient
GRACIA, F. 2003. “Las Cerámicas del Palacio-Santuario de Cancho Roano.” In Cancho Roano VIII: Los
Materiales Arqueológicos I, S. Celestino Pérez, ed. Istituto de Arqueología de Mérida. Mérida: 21-
194.
HATZIDAKIS, P. 1984. Athenian Red-Figure and Black-Figure Cup-Skyphoi of the Sixth and Fifth
Centuries BC, with Particular Reference to Material from Phthiotis. Ph.D. Diss. King’s College,
University of London.
HILL, D.K. 1947. “The Technique of Greek Metal Vases and Its Bearing on Vase Forms in Metal and
JULLY, J.-J. 1983. Céramiques Grecques ou de Type Grec et Autres Céramiques en Languedoc
Méditerranéen, Rousillon et Catalogne, VIIe – IVe s. avant notre ère et leur contexte socio-culturel. 2
vols. Annales littéraires de l’Université de Besançon 275. Les Belles Lettres, Paris.
KNUDSEN, A.C. 1961. The Relation between Phrygian Metalware and Pottery. Ph.D. Diss., U. of
Pennsylvania.
LAMB, W. 1929. Greek and Roman Bronzes. The Dial Press: New York.
LAWALL, M. 1998. “Ceramics and Positivism Revisited: Greek transport amphoras and history,” in
H. PARKINS and C. SMITH, eds. Trade, Traders and the Greek City. London. 75-101.
MARTELLI, M. 1958. “Oinochoai del pittore Shuvalov a Vassallaggi.” Bollettino d’Arte 53: 16-17.
archaischen Periode auf Cypern. Prähistorische Bronzefunde. Abteilung II, 8. Band. Verlag C.H. Beck.
MICHELINI, C. 2002. “Ceramiche a vernice nera.” Mozia. Gli scavi nella "Zona A" dell'abitato. M.L.
________. 1997. Athens and Persia in the Fifth Century B.C.: A Study in Cultural Receptivity.
Cambridge UP.
MÖBIUS, H. 1962. Antike Kunstwerke aus dem Martin-von-Wagner Museum: Erwerbungen 1945-1961.
Würzburg.
NEILS, J. 1995. “The Euthymides Krater from Morgantina.” AJA 99 (3): 427-444.
Spatial Patterns in Classic Maya Terminal Monument Dates .” Archeological Papers of the American
OLIVER, A. 1977. Silver for the Gods: 800 Years of Greek and Roman Silver. The Toledo Museum of
Art.
OSBORNE, R. 2001. “Why did Athenian pots appeal to the Etruscans?” World Archaeology 33: 277-
295.
PADGETT, M. 2003. The Centaur’s Smile. The Human Animal in Early Greek Art. Princeton University
PELLICER CATALÁN, M. 1982. “Las cerámicas del mundo fenicio en el bajo Guadalquivir.” In
Phönizier im Westen: Die Beiträge des Internationalen Symposiums über “Die phönizische Expansion im
westlichen Mittelmeerraum” in Köln vom 24. bis 27. April 1979. Madrider Beiträge 8: 371-406.
________. 1989. In Tartessos: Arqueología protohistórica del bajo Guadalquivir, M.E. AUBET
PETSA, F. 1955. “Eidēsei ek tēs 10ēs arkhaiologikēs periphereias (Ēpeirou): Thēsauros khalkōn
PICAZO, M. 1977. Las Cerámicas Áticas de Ullastret. Publicaciones Eventuales 28. Instituto de
REUSSER, C. 2002. Vasen für Etrurien. Verbreitung und Funktionen attischer Keramik im Etrurien des
ROBERTS, S.R. AND A. GLOCK 1986. “The Stoa Gutter Well: A Late Archaic Deposit in the
RUÍZ MATA, D. 1989. “Huelva: Un foco temprano de actividad metalurgica durante el bronce final.”
In Tartessos: Arqueología protohistórica del bajo Guadalquivir, M.E. AUBET SEMMLER, ed. Editore
SHEFTON, B.B. 1982. “Greeks and Greek Imports in the South of the Iberian Peninsula.” In Phönizier
im Westen: Die Beiträge des Internationalen Symposiums über “Die phönizische Expansion im
westlichen Mittelmeerraum” in Köln vom 24. bis 27. April 1979. Madrider Beiträge 8: 337-370.
________. 1997. “The Castulo Cup: An Attic Shape of Special Significance in Sicily.” In I vasi Attici ed
SJÖQVIST, E. 1973. Sicily and the Greeks: Studies in the Interrelationship between the Indigenous
Populations and the Greek Colonists. University of Michigan Press: Ann Arbor, MI.
SPARKES, B.A. and L. TALCOTT. 1970. The Athenian Agora XII: Black and Plain Pottery of the 6th, 5th,
and 4th Centuries BC. American School of Classical Studies at Athens: Princeton.
STAHL, A. 2002. “Colonial Entanglements and the Practices of Taste: An Alternative to Logocentric
STRONG, D.E. 1966. Greek and Roman Gold and Silver Plate. Methuen: London.
TOSTO, V. and A. VAN DER WOUDE. 1984. “Construction and Shape of the Nikosthenic Neck-
Amphora.” In Ancient Greek and related pottery. Proceedings of the international vase symposium,
TRAPICHLER, M. 2011 “Fabrics of Attic Black Glaze Ware”. In FACEM (version 06/06/2011)
(http://www.facem.at/project‐papers.php).
TRÉZINY, H. 1989. Kaulonia I: Sondages sur la fortification nord (1982-1985). Cahiers du Centre Jean
Hispánica II, Serie Primera: Monografías sobre cerámicas hispánicas 2. 2 vols. William L. Bryant
Foundation: Valencia.
TRUE, M. 2006. “Athenian Potters and the Production of Plastic Vases.” The Colors of Clay: Special
VERZÁR, M. 1973. “Eine Gruppe etruskischer Bandhenkelamphoren. Die Entwicklung von der
VICKERS, M., O. IMPEY and J. ALLAN. 1986. Pots and Pans: A Colloquium on Precious Metal and
VILLARD, F. 1959. “Vases attiques du Ve siècle avant J.-C. À Gouraya.” Lybica 7: 7-13
VOCOTOPOULOU, J. 1975. “Le Trésor de Vases de Bronze de Votonosi.” BCH 99: 729-788.
VON HASE, F.W. 1974. “Frühetruskische Goldschale aus Praeneste.” AA 89: 85-104.
VOZA, G. 1973a. “Thapsos.” In Archeologia nella Sicilia Sud-Orientale, P. Pelagatti and G. Voza, eds.
________. 1973b. “Villasmundo – Necropoli in Contrada Fossa.” In Archeologia nella Sicilia Sud-
Orientale, P. Pelagatti and G. Voza, eds. Centre Jean Bérard: Naples. 57-63.
WALSH, J. 2006. Ethnicity, Daily Life, and Trade: Domestic Assemblages from Fifth-Century BCE
________. 2011-12. “Urbanism and Identity at Classical Morgantina.” MAAR 56-57: 115-136.
________. 2014. Consumerism in the Ancient Mediterranean: Imports and Identity Construction.
Routledge Press.
30
CAPTIONS
Figure 1. Drawing of Cástulo cup from Morgantina (inv. 80-576). Drawing by Joann Boscarino.
Figure 2. Photograph of Cástulo cup from Morgantina (inv. 80-576). Photograph by Chris Williams.
Figure 3. Drawing of offset-inside cup-skyphos (“Morgantina cup”) from Morgantina (inv. 09-11).
Figure 4. Drawing of offset-inside cup-skyphos (“Morgantina cup”) from Morgantina (inv. 95-128).
Figure 5. Photograph of red-figure Morgantina cup from Morgantina (inv. 90-1). Photograph by
Chris Williams.
Figure 6. Photograph of Morgantina cup found at Los Castellones de Ceal (Jaén), Spain (inv. A-112).
Figure 7. Photograph of Morgantina cup in bronze, found at Votonosios (Epiros), Greece; now in the
Figure 8. Photograph of Cástulo cup in bronze, found at Votonosios (Epiros), Greece; now in the
Figure 10. Photograph of handle treatment on kantharos from Morgantina (95-180). Photograph by
Chris Williams.
Figure 11. Stemless/cup-skyphos from the Athenian agora (P32631). Photograph by Justin Walsh.
Figure 12. Inscription “XENON” on the underside of Athenian agora P32631. Photograph by Justin
Walsh.
31
Footnotes
1 The authors of the present article, along with Jenifer Neils and Shelley Stone, are
preparing the publication of the archaic settlement for the Morgantina Studies series,
2
Mimicry, as defined in postcolonial theory, was probably not at work, since mimicry in a colonial
3
Because Athenian pottery was absent from tombs at Carthage, Villard hypothesized that these
cups were signs of a trade route from Sicily that bypassed that city, serving the far west of the
Mediterranean instead (12-13). Shefton agreed (1982, 360). Greater detail about the specific burials
where these cups were discovered, and their occupants, would certainly be of enormous interest to
our study.
4
Sparkes and Talcott (1970, 101-102 with notes, and Fig. 5) included four other examples of large
stemless cups with inset lips in their catalogue, but in the drawings, only 471 has the requisite
thickened walls.
5
Only one stemless cup, in Lakonian fabric, was found in the archaic cemeteries (Inv. 61-826; Lyons
1995, 48). Close examination of the cup’s interior revealed a thin molded ridge about 2 cm below
6 Although Agora XII.578 (ca. 480 BCE) is often cited by scholars at other sites as a
comparandum for the type also identified at Morgantina, that volume only shows a
photograph of the cup’s exterior. A profile drawing of the same cup in a later publication
shows that while it has a concave lip, there is no offset (Roberts and Glock 1986, fig. 14, no.
41). True comparanda for this shape in unpainted black gloss are Geneva 8899 (published in
CVA Switzerland (Geneva 1) 26.6, with profile drawing, Pl. B.7); Oxford 418 (CVA Great
Britain 3 (Oxford 1) 48, 4); possibly also Stuttgart KAS 256 (CVA Germany (Stuttgart 1)
36.10) and Martin von Wagner-Museum, Würzburg 4952 (Möbius 1962, 50-51). In red-
32
figure: Berlin F2591, from Nola, attributed to the Penthesilea Painter (published in CVA
DDR 3 (Berlin 1) 33, 1-3); New York 96.18.76, from Capua, also attributed to the Penthesilea
Painter; Oxford 520, attributed to Epiktetos (published in CVA Great Britain 3 (Oxford 1) 41,
9-10; and Barcelona 578, from Ampurias, unattributed (Trías de Arribas 1967, 156 and Pl.
7
The red-figure cup-skyphos with offset inside from Morgantina, inv. 90-1, will be included in Neils’
discussion of figured pottery from the Cittadella settlement. Blázquez (1975, 111 and fig. 55.1) has
published a red-figure example of a very probable cup of the same type with ivy-leaf on the exterior
from the Ibérica de los Patos necropolis at Cástulo. At Ullastret, a Cástulo cup was found with the
ivy-leaf motif on the rim interior (Inv. 1519; Cabrera Bonet and Sánchez Fernández 2000). A concave
rim cup-skyphos with this motif on the rim exterior was found at La Illeta dels Banyets (no. 149;
García Martín 2003, 179 and fig. 25). Another red-figure cup (inv. 4-XV, Soc. Archéologique de
Montpellier), found at Castelnau-le-Lez in Languedoc, was identified by Jully (1983, Vol. 2.1, 801) as
a Cástulo type, but in a published image (Jacobsthal 1930, fig. 10) it appears more likely to be a cup-
skyphos instead. It was attributed by Shefton to the Codrus Painter and dated to around 425.
8
Such a pattern is clearer in the case of four Shuvalov Painter oinochoai found together in a single
9 The published examples are 35/O413 and 88/O414 (Kustermann Graff 2002, 277 and Tav.
CXXV).
10 To Del Vais’ category of cup-skyphoi from Monte Maranfusa, we might also add G44
(which she called a “boccaletto” (p. 326 and fig. 277)). This cup bears a strong resemblance
to some smaller cup-skyphoi found on Cittadella, including 09-11, 09-70, and 09-99a-b.
11
Gassner’s “Fuβlose Schale” subtype 2 cannot be identified with certainty as either a cup-skyphos
or a stemless due to the poor preservation of its wall profile. Subtype 3 is surely a stemless. The
distinction Gassner makes between “Fuβlose Schalen” and “Schalenskyphoi” is the relative distance
33
between each of her types and stemless cups (which the “Fuβlose Schalen” most resemble) or
12
Tréziny makes no comment regarding the offsets found on the cup-skyphoi, though he does note
the discussion of Cástulo cups by Shefton (1982) and Bonet and Jurado, and suggests, citing Villard
(1959) that their production lasted until the first quarter of the fourth century.
13
We would like to thank Elizabeth Baltes, who examined the cups in the Ioannina Museum for us in
June 2012.
14
Hill derided the notion that sharp ridges could be or were made by ancient metalsmiths (1947,
252). Admittedly, the edges of carinations found on extant Etruscan or Greek metal kantharoi, for
example, while are not razor-sharp, do, however, clearly delineate a purposely marked change in
profile (Knudsen, 31). See also Knudsen's discussion of ridges in Phrygian metalware (1961, 81-82).
Her comparisons of eighth- and seventh-century metal wares and pottery demonstrate how potters
often exaggerated sharp angles and flaring rims when transferring shapes from metal to ceramics
(299-306, 313, 316); one could add the Middle Helladic tradition of MInyan Ware, with its
15 For an example of a dinos with ring attachments: Lyons 1996: pl. 43, pl. 84 no. 18-10, inv.
No. 70-459, p. 194 (first quarter of 5th c.). For a carinated cup with high-swung handle from
the necropolis, pl. 64, pl. 88 no. 32-8, p. 214 in. no 70-48 (last quarter of the 7th c.). There are
numerous fragments of carinated cups in the unpublished material from the settlement.
16
In support of his argument, Gill cited Kritias’ list of excellent things and their origins, quoted in
Athenaios 1.28b-c: “The Etruscan cup of wrought gold is best, as well as all the bronze which adorns
17
Verzár (1973) has traced the evolution of the shape of the Nikosthenic amphora of around 580
BCE in bucchero from spiral-decorated Italic amphorai made in both metal and impasto. But the
most characteristic details of the later jars were their broad strap handles and raised ridges on the
upper belly, which are wholly metallic in origin. Tosto and van der Woude (1984, 163), however,
34
have denied that the Nikosthenic amphora was related to metal antecedents, claiming that the
characteristic ribbing and strap handles were simply standard features of the Etruscan ceramic
repertoire.
18
The mugs are Inv. 821-822 in the Caltanissetta Archaeological Museum (Panvini 2006, 88-89).
19
The original example of a cantharoid kotyle is Ashmolean 1928.32 (published by Beazley in CVA
20
Camp compared the cup to Agora XII.578, but as noted above (n. 6), that example has no offset.
21
The ratio of the cup’s height to its rim diameter is 1:2.45, relatively close to the norm established
by Hatzidakis for stemless cups (1:2.5), but the ratio of its foot diameter to its rim diameter is 1:1.65,
which is more appropriate for a cup-skyphos (1:1.6-1.74) than for a stemless cup (1:1.8) (Hatzidakis
1984, 17).