Ure Museum Database



Browse
There are 18 objects for which Shape_description contains → corinthian
22.3.6 Corinthian type. Handles are circular and horizontal and opposite each other.
26.2.24 Two fragments from one vase. Fragment A: Body sherd of Corinthian black-figured pottery column-krater; Fragment B: Body sherd of Corinthian black-figured pottery column-krater;
26.2.3 Body sherd of Corinthian black-figured pottery ring aryballos; very worn;
26.2.4 Fragment of mouth, neck, body, and handle of Corinthian black-figured pottery ring-aryballos;
26.2.85 Body sherd of Corinthian black-figured pottery closed vessel, possibly a broad bottomed oinochoe;
26.2.86 Rim sherd of Corinthian black-figured pottery kotyle;
26.2.87 Body sherd of Corinthian pottery globular aryballos;
26.2.88 Rim and mouth sherd of Corinthian, probably black-figured, pottery globular aryballos with part of neck;
26.2.89 Handle-plate sherd of Corinthian black-figured pottery column krater;
26.2.90 Rim sherd of Corinthian black-figured pottery column-krater with part of handle plate and shoulder;
26.2.91 Body sherd of Corinthian red-ground, black-figured, pottery open vessel, probably a krater;
26.2.92 Body sherd of Corinthian red-ground, black-figured, pottery open vessel, most likely a krater;
27.4.11 Corinthian shape. Pale fabric, darkened except under handles and foot.
45.6.34 Bell-shaped mouth tapering to a short neck that broadens to an ovoid body. High swung strap handle joins from neck to shoulder. Conical foot. 'Pagenstecher lekythos' type. Cf. CVA Michigan 1, pl. 27.11 (smaller but similar shape and surface, said to have been found at Taranto) and Lentini inv. 61597: Lagona 1973, no. 85, pl. 11 (more slender). Both of these examples have smaller handles. For Sicilian vessels of this shape (decorated with bands or undecorated) see examples from Selinunte (Anne Kustermann Graf, Selinunte. Necropoli di Manicalunga. Le tombe della Contrada Gaggera [2002] 181 inv. nos. 113/0 952 and 953, pl. 57 [tomb 113]); Camarina (MonAnt 54 [1990] 25, pl. VIII [tomb 590.2]; 54, pl. XXVI [tomb 799.1-2]; and pl. LXXXIII [tombs 1222.5-6 and 1232.2, which are taken to be (imitative of) Corinthian lekythoi).
50.12.47 Fragment of cup with nearly straight sides (like a Corinthian skyphos)
REDMG:1953.25.53 Incurving rim with concave lip, narrowing to a short neck at the top of which is attached a small vertical strap handle that extends the the shoulder; wall curves continuously from neck, widening to an ovoid body atop a disk foot; underside concave with a slight circular protruberance at centre. Tapering 'cucumber', survival of the Late Corinthian Archaic type (see Corinth 13, 140-41, fig. 15), but with a disk foot. E.g. Corinth T1317: Corinth 13, 222 no. 277-4, pl. 37. Cf. also Rhitsona 50.273.
REDMG:1953.25.9 Corinthian type skyphos. Rounded incurved rim below which emerge two horizontal round handles, rising slightly; tall, thin-walled body bulges at top and tapers sharply to a flaring ring foot with a concave resting surface and raised underside.
REDMG:1964.1621 Wide mouth with moulded, slightly concave lip, and slightly everted rim, below which the short vertical strap handle emerges, bends, and descends to the shoulder. Globular body attached to an angled ring foot. Shape similar to Corinthian round-mouthed oinochoe, type B (cf. Corinth 13, fig. 14), but with a slightly concave lip, and more globular than Corinth T1712: Corinth 13, 228 no. 296-2, pl. 41.
The Ure Museum is part of
The University of Reading, Whiteknights, PO Box 217, Reading, RG6 6AH