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V.—The Vases of Magna Graecia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2012

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Extract

When we reflect on the grandeur, wealth, and power of the numerous representatives of Hellenic culture that caused a considerable portion of Italy to be called a greater Greece, we can hardly fail to be struck with the scanty knowledge we possess of their political and social history.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1896

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References

page 113 note a Polybius, ii. 39, ἐν τοῖς κατὰ τὴνταλίαν τόποις, κατὰ τὴν Μεγάληνλλάδα τότε πϱοσαγο ρευομένην; Livy, xxxi. 7, Tarentini … oraque illa Italiae, quam Majorem Græciam vocant; Ovid, Fasti, iv. 64, Itala nam tellus Græcia Major erat. As to the origin of the epithet, see Athenaeus, xii. 523, e.

page 113 note b e. g. in vi. 127, the mention of Smindyrides as pre-eminent among the gilded youth of Sybaris.

page 113 note c According to Heraclides Ponticus (quoted by Athenaeus, xii. 522 a) the Sybarites set up an opposition to the Olympic games.

page 113 note d Paus. vi. 19, 11. Cf. F. Lenormant, La Grande-Grèce, i. 133, “Métaponte est un désert et on y arrive par le désert.” So Cicero speaks of Magna Grœcia generally, “Quae nunc quidem deleta est; “De Amicitia, iv.

page 114 note a There is no complete list of the Greek colonies, but, according to Pliny, Miletus alone founded over ninety: “Miletus … super nonaginta urbium per cuncta maria genetrix.”—Nat. Hist. v. 31.

page 114 note b Studien zur Geschichte des griechischen Alphabets (4th edition), 156.

page 114 note c VII. 1.

page 115 note a Mr. H. F. Tozer, in the Journal of Hellenic Studies for 1889 (x. 11), states that there are still “twenty thousand persons in the South of Italy who speak Greek as their native tongue.”

page 115 note b See “Linguistie Islands,” by Prince L. L. Bonaparte, in the Transactions of the Philological Society, 1888–90, p. 339.

page 115 note c Ibid. 363, where reference is made to the treatises of Professors Comparetti, Morosi, and Pellegrini.

page 115 note d Journal of Hellenic Studies, x. 37. Mr. Tozer concludes (p. 42) that “the Greek-speaking population of South Italy … are the descendants of the Byzantine Greeks, who migrated thither not later than the eleventh century.”

page 115 note e Peintures de vases antiques, Introduction, pp. ix. x.

page 115 note f In 1828. See Gerhard's “Rapporto Volcente,” in Annali d. Inst. iii. 5.

page 116 note a In his introduction to Peintures de vases antiques, p. vii.

page 116 note b Ibid. 3.

page 116 note c Outlines from the Figures and Compositions upon the Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Vases of the late Sir William Hamilton.

page 117 note a No. 1,830 in Furtwängler's Beschreibung. For illustrations see Mr. Cecil Smith in vol. ii. 309, and Mr. A. S. Murray in vol. vii. 54, of the Journal of Hellenic Studies.

page 117 note b Now in the British Museum, in wall-case 7 of the Second Vase-room. For further details see Mr. Walters in Journal of Hellenic Studies, xiii. 77–78, and M. Reinach in the Gaz. des Beaux-Arts for March, 1894. For a later Theban cup at Oxford, with Boreas and Odysseus, see Prof. Gardner, Museum Oxoniense, p. 18 and pl. xxvi.

page 117 note c Fourth Vase-room, wall-case 69.

page 117 note d Ibid, wall-case 72.

page 117 note e See Heydemann, Die Phlyakendarstellungen auf bemalten Vasen, Jahrbuch d.Inst. i. 260–313. Cf. Jahn's Einleitung.

page 117 note f See Arch. Ztg. for 1849, Taf. 12. Euripides was the favourite source, and he is said himself to have been in his youth a painter. See Vogel, Scenen euripideischen Tragödien in griechischen Vasengemälden, pp. 6 and 7.

page 117 note g Fourth Vase-room, wall-case 18 No. F. 149. See Mr.Murray, A. S., in Journal of Hellenic Studies, xi. 225230, plates vi. and viiGoogle Scholar.

page 118 note a Monumenti inediti Inst. di Corr. Arch., viii. 9.

page 118 note b No. 849 of Otto Jahn's Beschreibung. Cf. Baumeister, Denkmäler, p. 1928, and pl. lxxxvii. It is given in colour by Lau, Die griechischen Vasen, pl. xxxv.

page 118 note c Die Vasensammlungen des Museo Nazionale zu Neapel, beschrieben von H. Heydemann.

page 118 note d See Mau, Geschichte der decorativen Wandmalerei in Pompeji, p. 124 foll. Pl. iii.-ix.

page 118 note e In Baumeister's Denkmäler, p. 2006.

page 118 note f See Lau, Die griechischen Vasen, pl. xlii. 1. c; Genick, Griechische Keramik, pls. viii.-x. On one such vase in the British Museum (F 175 in the Fourth Vase-room) there is a picture of a vase of the same make.

page 118 note g No. 315 in wall-case 55. Cf. Furtwängler's “Apulische-geometrische Gattung,” No. 276, and Form 14 in his Beschreibung. Prof. Gardner seems not to think them so early. See Museum Oxoniense, p. 3; and No. 83, fig. 8, on p. 4.

page 119 note a e.g. on F. 278, Pedestal 12, in the Fourth Vase-room, the Death of Priam, and the meeting of Menelaos and Helen at the taking of Troy.

page 119 note b See Von Rohden, in Baumeister's Denkmäler, p. 2007. The others who signed were Python and Lasimos (Jahn, Einleitung, ccxxxi.).

page 119 note c Humoristische Vasenbilder.

page 119 note d No. 2473 of Heydemann's Catalogue. It represents Herakles and the Hesperides.

page 119 note e See pls. i. and iii. of Genick's Oriechische Keramik.

page 119 note f There are some fine examples of this class (dating from the last half of the fourth century) in the Third Vase-room of the British Museum, cases 17 to 24.

page 119 note g Archaeologia, xlviii. 45.

page 120 note a Some of the vases in the Koller collection at Berlin are 3 feet 5 inches high, or, with the handles, 4 feet; e. g. No. 3,258 of Furtwängler's Beschreibung. See O. Müller, Anc. Art, 301, 1.

page 120 note b e. g. in the British Museum, Fourth Vase-room, on an Apulian amphora, F. 335, in wall-case 15; also on a kelebe, F. 297, in wall-case 48.

page 120 note c Yet compare the figures of athletes, about a foot high, on the reverse of the Lucanian amphora, F. 184, on pedestal 7 in the Fourth Vase-room.

page 120 note d See Section 11 of Brunn and Krell's introduction to Lau's Die griechischen Vasen, and Taf. xxxv.

page 121 note a Compare the section of an amphora in Pl. xxxv. of Lau's Die griechischen Vasen with that in Pl. viii.

page 121 note b As on two amphoræ in Passeri, Picturae Etruscorum, plates 264 and 265.

page 121 note c Ibid. plates 143 and 182.

page 121 note d Ibid. plate 272.

page 121 note e Fourth Vase-room, wall-case 22, No. F. 286.

page 121 note f On an amphora in Passeri, op. cit. pl. 182, there are three figures, forming a dramatic tableau.

page 121 note g Passeri, op. cit. plates 190, 267, 270, 271.

page 121 note h Plate 260.

page 121 note i Of the eleven portraits in the National Gallery none have grey hair, though two women and one man have an elderly appearance.

page 121 note k Fourth Vase-room, wall-case 16, No. F. 281.

page 121 note l Lucian, De Syria Dea, 35, speaks of a bearded Apollo as existing at Hierapolis, but as a thing foreign to Greek ideas; indeed, representations of the bearded Apollo are very rare. Three I have observed on black figured amphoræ in the British Museum (B. 147, 212, and 260, in the Second Vase-room). Cf. the François vase and the Melian vase and a fragment from the Acropolis at Athens. See also Gerhard, Trinkschalen, Taf. 4, 5 (a black-figured kylix from Tarquinii, Annali d. Inst. iii. 146, note 313); and Auserlesene Vasen, i. 1. Cf. p. 117, note 64; and Stark, Archäologische Zeitung, xii. 321 (a marble statue at Lyons; but the genuineness of the inscription is doubtful. See Overbeck, Zeus, p. 572, note 91, and Apollon, p. 367).

page 122 note a As in the picture of the mad Herakles by Assteas, Mon. Inst. viii. 10.

page 122 note b Meisterwerke, p. 151.

page 123 note a In Plate iv. of his Beschreibung.

page 123 note b Athenaeus (475) speaks of κελέβη as an ἔκπωμα or drinking-cup; but he seems to have misunderstood his own quotation from Anakreon.

page 124 note a Mon. Inst. viii. Taf. xxi. See Helbig, Ann., 1865, pp. 262–295.

page 124 note b See Friederichs-Wolters, Bausteine, p. 398, No. 1,197.