Lot.No Description First Day of Sale Tuesday 18Th November 2014 At

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Lot.No Description First Day of Sale Tuesday 18Th November 2014 At Lot.No Description First Day of Sale Tuesday 18th November 2014 at 2.30pm Lots 1- 220 * 1 Part blue and white tea set, * 2 White patterned tea service * 3 4 Small china plates * 4 Embossed wall plaque, € 8-10 * 5 Crystal vase, cup, saucer,& small doll € 3-6 * 6 2 Stainless steel dishes, * 7 2 Plated trays, plated stand,& plated jug, € 8-10 * 8 7 China plates & china bowl € 8-10 * 9 9 Antique small glass chandelier shades, € 55-65 * 10 13 Antique small glass chandelier shades, € 50-60 * 11 6 Wooden Alter candlesticks and 2 brass ditto, € 15-25 * 12 Pair brass candlesticks, € 15-25 * 13 Brass antique spirit burner, € 10-15 * 14 German part dinner service, plates, tureens, etc., € 50-70 * 15 Pinewood bookcase with underlying drawers, 60-80 * 16 Stained wood upright 5 drawer chest, € 30-50 * 17 Side table veneered in olivewood & mahogany. € 40-50 * 18 Stained wood card table having fold over top, € 30-40 * 19 Antique mahogany framed armchair, € 120-150 * 20 Antique Victorian mahogany centre table Tal Biscuttin € 300-400 * 21 Antique gilt wood pelmet, € 80-120 * 22 5 Stained wood chairs, € 50-80 * 22A Painting in gilt frame, ' Flowers in a vase ' € 50-100 * 23 Antique gilt pelmet, A/F € 40-60 * 24 Large oil painting in gilt frame on board 'Cottage scene' € 30-40 * 25 Mirror in ebonized and gilt frame, € 45-55 * 26 Pair and another black and white engravings framed, € 15-20 * 27 Oil on board framed, Mother and child, € 80-100 * 28 16 Engravings in mahogany frames, € 40-60 * 28A 12 Engravings in mahogany frames, € 40-60 * 29 Antique fan in gilt frame, € 25-35 * 30 Small antique candlestick, € 12-20 * 31 Small antique Majolica dish, € 35-45 * 32 Set of 3 Majolica bowls, ( 1 damaged ) € 35-45 * 33 Antique china bowl € 5-8 * 33a China cups and saucers, ornament and 2 red glass shades € 8-12 * 33b Small china bowl with handles € 8-10 * 34 Ceramic jug and basin, € 35-45 * 35 Plated candlestick with glass shade, china egg holder, ladle € 10-15 * 36 Ceramic fruit bowl € 30-40 * 37 Large French hanging tapestry 60-80 * 38 China antique deep bowl, € 10-15 * 39 Plated font on mahogany plaque, € 20-25 * 40 Plated font and china font, € 15-25 * 41 2 Stained wood and 2 other Church chairs, having rush seats € 20-30 * 42 Mahogany framed armchair covered in red plush, € 80-100 * 43 Antique oak corner hanging cupboard, € 220-260 * 44 Pair antique mahogany framed hall chairs having cane seats€ 80-100 * 45 Antique Maltese coffer with lift up top, € 350-450 * 46 Mahogany cupboard with 5 enclosed drawers and dressing table swing oval mirror framed on top, and 2 small drawers, € 90-110 * 47 Antique mahogany 2 panel door Armoire, € 250-350 * 48 Pine 2 door cupboard, € 40-60 * 49 Pine chest of 3 drawers, € 40-60 * 50 Mahogany coffer, € 50-70 * 51 Attrastian oil lamp, € 40-50 * 52 Roman earthenware dish, € 30-40 * 53 Small Punico Roman Oenochoe, € 35-45 * 54 Punic small earthenware Amphora, € 40-50 * 55 2 Handle small Roman Amphora, € 40-50 * 56 Punic oil lamp, € 25-35 * 57 Punic Roman oil lamp, € 40-50 * 58 Egyptian Ushabti with hieroglyphics, € 250- 350 * 59 Punico Roman Squat jug, € 110-130 * 60 Punic earthenware dish, € 30-40 * 61 Late Roman earthenware fragments, € 30-40 * 62 Earthenware bottle, € 45-55 * 63 Earthenware Amphora, € 40-50 * 64 Punico Roman Olpe, € 110-130 * 65 2 Small Greek dishes, € 40-50 * 66 Miniature Roman Olpe € 30-40 * 67 Roman Olpe, € 35-45 * 68 6 Punic miniatures, € 20-30 * 69 Punico Roman Olpe, € 50-70 * 70 Roman drinking cup, € 20-30 * 71 Pair oil paintings framed, ' Flowers in a vase' € 80-100 * 72 Antique oil painting in gilt frame, ' Cottage scene ' € 40-60 * 73 4 Antique lithographs depicting Antiquities ( A.A.Caruana ) mounted in Maltese mahogany frame, € 500-600 * 74 4 Antique lithographs depicting Antiquities ( A.A.Caruana ) mounted in Maltese mahogany frame, € 500-600 * 75 4 Antique lithographs depicting Antiquities ( A.A.Caruana ) mounted in Maltese mahogany frame, € 500-600 * 76 Antique engraving in gilt frame, Maltese coins ', € 90-110 * 77 Antique engraving in gilt frame, Maltese coins ', € 90-110 * 78 Antique mirror in gilt frame, € 250-350 * 79 Pair china figures of a lady and companion, € 350-450 * 80 Antique French mantel clock ornated with serve plaques, € 600-700 * 81 Antique Koro vase with lid, € 170-200 * 82 Oak cased Tantalus € 90-110 * 83 Antique Japanese wall charger, a/f € 80-120 * 84 Pair antique Majolica plates, € 40-60 * 85 Antique white Majolica dish, € 35-45 * 86 Antique white Majolica dish, € 50-70 * 87 China water font on plaque, € 35-45 * 88 3 Ceramic water fonts € 55-65 * 89 Antique wall hanging oil lamp, € 50-70 * 90 Maltese Victorian mahogany sideboard with cupboards below and drawers on top, and a carved back, € 400-500 * 91 Regency mahogany round dining table mounted on a pillar support ending on brass casters, & seats 6 person, € 900-1100 * 92 Set of 6 mahogany dining room chairs, and a pair of matching carvers to match, having cane seats, € 350-450 * 93 Victorian mahogany two tier bookcase enclosed by two glass doors and two panel doors enclosed base cupboard, € 700-900+B148 * 94 Georgian mahogany D-end side card table , € 450-550 * 95 Frank Borg, pair oval paintings in oval gilt frames, € 250-350 * 96 A fine antique oil painting in ebonized and gilt frame, Still Life of flowers and fruit' € 700-800 * 97 M. Corleo. Antique oil painting in gilt frame, ' Still Life of Pottery Vases, € 550-650 * 98 Pair coloured engravings in black frames, ' Livorno Scenes'€ 120-150 * 99 Brockdorff, Pair antique black and white engravings in mahogany frames, € 80-120 * 100 Large antique oil painting in gilt frame,' Christ preaching' € 350-450 * 101 John Martin Borg 1978, Watercolour, Malta Harbour Scene, € 240-280 * 102 Silver 925 Ash tray, € 20-30 * 103 Small pair silver 925 sweet bowls, € 80-120 * 104 Small Italian silver embossed sugar basin, € 200-250 * 105 Silver cigarette box, € 70-80 * 106 Small Italian silver sugar basin with lid, € 200-250 * 107 Maltese Silver coffee pot, by Guiseppe Aquilina 1965 € 650-750 * 108 19thC, Italian silver oil lamp Naples 1800, 200 grams € 250-350 * 109 18thC, English Victorian silver trophy cup by I.Cookson, Newcastle 1745 310 grams, € 450-550 * 110 Italian silver jewel box, € 80-120 * 111 Small Italian silver jug, € 150-200 * 112 5 Silver 925 tea spoons, € 30-50 * 113 Miniature crystal perfume bottle having a silver rim, € 35-45 * 114 Maltese silver paper knife with coin handle, € 60-80 * 114a 18ct ring, on White gold and pearls € 100-120 * 114b 14ct Gold ring with garnets, € 160-200 * 114c 14ct White gold ring with diamonds, sapphire & Opel € 180-200 * 114d Sterling Silver 925 Brooch ' Butterfly synth stone, € 170=190 * 114e Sterling Silver Collier with emeralds & marcasites, € 130-150 * 114f Gold ring with diamonds, having changeable agate rings, € 80-100 * 114g 14ct Gold bracelet with agate gemstones, € 90-100 * 114h Cultured Pearl necklace with gold clasp € 80-100 * 114i Cultured Pearl necklace with silver 835 clasp € 80-100 * 114j Sterling silver 925 Bracelet, € 45-55 * 115 Antique brass Samovar, € 60-80 * 116 Antique brass kettle on stand complete with spirit burner € 100-150 * 117 Brass table lamp, € 15-25 * 118 Brass scales in mahogany with glass case, € 180-220 * 119 Antique copper warming pan, € 75-85 * 120 Pair antique china vases ornated with flowers, € 240-260 * 121 Continental china figure under a tree trunk, € 200-250 * 122 Pair antique red double row lustres with drops, € 550-650 * 123 Antique French 3 piece clock set with serve plaques, and pair of side candlesticks, € 650-750 * 124 Pair Majolica flower pots,( slight damage ) € 35-45 * 125 Satsuma Ivory Task on Ivory stand, € 110-130 * 126 Hispano Moresque holy water font, A/F € 35-45 * 127 Wooden cross on stand, € 15-20 * 128 Antique Staffordshire font of our Lady, € 20-30 * 129 Silver font mounted on an oval plaque, A/F € 50-70 * 130 Maltese Victorian mahogany serpentine front console table with white marble top, € 350-450 * 131 Richly carved English oak coffer with lift up top, € 400-500 * 132 Victorian walnut 2 tier whatnot, € 200-250 * 133 Victorian walnut pier cabinet having a glass front door, € 150-200 * 134 A Victorian inlaid walnut glass cabinet enclosed by two glass doors and ornated with ormolu mounts, € 1300-1500 * 135 Large Majolica antique charger, € 130-170 * 136 Glazed pottery dish, € 15-25 * 137 Majolica deep bowl, A/F € 5-15 * 138 Large Majolica Jardinière on stand, € 450-550 * 139 Pair Staffordshire porcelain figures, € 180-220 * 140 Ceramic cheese container with matching cover, € 30-40 * 141 Antique marble mantelpiece clock, € 60-80 * 142 Antique green upright vase with drops, € 35-45 * 143 Mid 18thC, Glass font on plaque, € 80-120 * 144 Antique glass vase, € 35-45 * 145 Ornamental china clock € 120-150 * 146 Antique wax Baby Jesus with Ganutel flowers under glass dome on a wooden base € 1800-2000 * 147 Pair Dolton china vases, € 100-120 * 148 2 China miniature comports, € 40-50 * 149 Antique Relic framed having inlaid frame, € 90-110 * 150 Antique Relic framed having inlaid frame, € 90-110 * 151 Pair large 19thC. Majolica Chargers € 2000-2400 * 152 1997, Watercolour framed of Valletta, Signed. € 350-400 * 153 Nikolay Velichako oil on canvas 'St Elmo's Point' € 80-100 * 154 Joseph Galea 1945, Maltese coloured Grand Harbour € 80-100 * 155 Attribution Esprit Barthet, Oil painting framed 'Portrait of Canon Vincenzo Azzopardi, € 900-1200 * 156 J.Bonello, Watercolour Harbour scene framed, € 340-360 * 157 J.Bonello, Oval Watercolour Harbour scene framed, € 340-360 * 158 19thC, French
Recommended publications
  • On the Original of Two Piece of Glass Amphoriskos in Resun Museum*
    KARADEN Z, 2018; (38) ON THE ORIGINAL OF TWO PIECE OF GLASS AMPHORISKOS IN RESUN MUSEUM* RESUN MÜZES ’NDEK CAM AMPHOR SKOS’UN ORJ NALL ÜZER NE Fevziye EKER** ABSTRACT The study includes observations on two glass amphoriskos in the group of archeological vessels in Giresun Museum. The artifacts that are gained to the museum by way of purchasing are protected in the storage. Amphoriskos were produced by using the core-formed technique. At first step, their photographs have been taken, the inventory information has been recorded and the catalog has been prepared. After the examination on these works, it has been tried to reach information about the production places of such glass vessels or the way of arriving to the city by considering the form and appearance characteristics. Furthermore, it has been emphasized whether the studied works are original or not. Key words: Giresun Museum, Glass, Amphoriskos, Core-Formed Technique, Fake Glass Vessels. ÖZ Çal ma, Giresun Müzesi’ndeki arkeolojik eserler grubunda yer alan 2 adet cam amphoriskos üzerine yap lan gözlemleri kapsamaktad r. Sat n alma yolu ile müzeye kazand lan eserler depoda korunmaktad r. Amphoriskoslar iç kal p tekni i kullan larak üretilmi tir. Eserlerin ilk olarak foto raf çal mas yap lm , envanter bilgileri al nm ve katalog haz rlanm r. Bu eserler üzerinde yap lan inceleme sonras nda form ve bezeme özellikleri göz önünde tutularak bu tip cam kaplar n üretim yerleri veya kente geli ekli konusunda bilgilere ula lmaya çal lm r. Ayr ca incelenen eserlerin orijinal olup olmad klar üzerinde durulmu tur. Anahtar Kelimeler: Giresun Müzesi, Cam, Amhoriskos, ç Kal p Tekni i, Sahte Cam Kaplar.
    [Show full text]
  • CMC-7332 the Social and Cultural Contexts of Historic Writing Practices.Indb
    This pdf of your paper in The Social and Cultural Contexts of Historic Writing Practices is from the open-access on-line version of this book, available at: http:// books.casematepublishing.com/The_Social_and_Cultural_Contexts_of_Historic_ Writing_Practices.pdf. The work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA. This licence allows for copying any part of the online work for personal and commercial use, providing author attribution is clearly stated. Materials provided by third parties remain the copyright of their owners. AN OFFPRINT FROM The Social and Cultural Contexts of Historic Writing Practices edited by Philip J. Boyes, Philippa M. Steele and Natalia Elvira Astoreca Hardback Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-478-5 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-479-2 (ePub) Oxford & Philadelphia Chapter 14 Why με? Personhood and agency in the earliest 1 Greek inscriptions (800–550 BC) James Whitley Introduction: the view from Methana The archaeological museum in Poros is not much visited. In summer, the harbours and jetties of Poros are crowded with yachts on their way from Athens to the islands of the Saronic Gulf and the Southern Argolid – Aegina, Poros, Hydra and Spetses. Few, however, stop to go to the museum. If you do you may very well miss this epigram (Fig. 14.1). Unlike the marble inscribed bases from Attica, where the inscriptions are highlighted in red (such as that of Kroisos2 that addresses a passer-by; see Table 14.3) the letters here are very hard to read, and the stone itself (volcanic trachyte) very unsuitable for an inscription.3 It does not aid legibility (or at least our notions of legibility) that the letters are inscribed ‘boustrophedon’, as the ox ploughs.
    [Show full text]
  • GAR Volume 7 Issue 21 Cover and Front Matter
    GREECE & ROME VOLUME VII OXFORD : AT THE CLARENDON PRESS PUBLISHED FOR THE CLASSICAL ASSOCIATION Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.40.219, on 02 Oct 2021 at 04:56:59, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0017383500005532 CONTENTS Number 19 (OCT. 1937) APROPOS OF TRANSLATION. By Randall Swingler . 1 THE DIRECT METHOD. By Alice M. Croft . .11 GEOMETRIC MAN. By R. P. Austin . .18 CATULLUS IN GEYSERLAND. By E. M. Blaiklock . 25 NEC ME TACEBIT BILBILIS. By H. Mattingly . 28 PARTY POLITICS AND FREE SPEECH IN DEMO- CRATIC ATHENS. By Lionel Pearson . 41 LATIN CROSSWORD SOLUTION—PROPER NAMES . 50 DOWN THE HIGH STREET. By W. F. Gosling . 51 LUDUS ELEGIACUS. By L. E. Eyres 56 VERSION. By H.Rackham . .58 LATIN CROSSWORD 59 REVIEWS ....... 60 DESCRIPTION OF SUPPLEMENTARY ILLUSTRA- TIONS. Plates XXV-XXVIII . 63 Number 20 (FEB. 1938) PERSEPOLIS. By G. Stott . 65 VERSIONS. ByK.D.R.. -75 THE PUBLIC GAMES OF THE ROMANS. By J. B. Poynton ....... 76 TRANSLATING POETRY. By W. H. Oldak* • . 86 HORACE'S CRITICISM OF LIFE. By Donald A. Mac- Naughton ........ 101 SOLUTION TO LATIN CROSSWORD 'LUDUS—A NONLUDENDO' . .114 HERESIES. VI—THE THIRD CONCORD. By J. W. Haime . .115 GREEK CROSSWORD . .118 READERS'QUERIES - - . - .119 VERSION. By A. D. Nightingale . .120 REVIEWS ....... 122 BOOKS RECEIVED . 126 DESCRIPTION OF SUPPLEMENTARY ILLUSTRA- TIONS. Plates XXIX-XXXII . .127 Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/corePrinted. IP address: in Great 170.106.40.219 Britain, on 02 Oct 2021 at 04:56:59, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms.
    [Show full text]
  • The Areopagos Oval Building Reconsidered*
    The Areopagos Oval Building Reconsidered* Floris van den Eijnde, Michael Laughy Introduction The Areopagos Oval Building (AOB) provides a rare insight into Athenian architecture during the Geometric period, a time in which the archaeological record is mostly confined to graves . Dorothy Burr’s original 1933 publication of the building remains an exemplary and exhaustive presentation of the archaeological evidence (Burr 1933) . Burr identified the structure as a house (e .g . Burr 1933, 637) . In 1968, however, Homer Thompson suggest- ed that the structure served a cult for the dead rather than a domestic house (Thompson 1968, 58-60; 1978) . He based his theory on the seemingly isolated position of the building, its superposition directly over an EG I child’s burial, and its proximity to nearby burials (fig. 1) . Thompson also suggested that “a thin, low stone socle for the bounding wall, a clay floor cobbled in part, and traces of burning on the floor, would be equally and perhaps more ap- propriate to a temenos open to the sky” (Thompson 1968, 60) . A large PA votive deposit covered much of the building’s collapsed remains . This depos- it included fine pottery, figurines of horses and chariots, rectangular pinakes, and miniature terracotta shields . Burr suggested that the deposit was not associated with the AOB, but rather was refuse from a nearby sanctuary (Burr 1933, 636-640) . For Thompson, the depos- it secured the AOB’s identity as a shrine, for he considered the votive assemblage “closely matched in the votive deposit found in the dromos of the Mycenaean tholos tomb at Meni- dhi,” and therefore suitable for a “cult of the dead” (Thompson, 1968, 60) .
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction to Sleep Under Stone
    Stones of Contradiction: An Introduction to Sleep Under Stone Artist’s rendering of Homeric Troy In the summer of 2002, I went on a writing retreat in Oregon to try to finish a novel, or what I hoped was a novel, which I had started some eight years earlier. It was the story of the fall of Troy, certainly among the oldest and most frequently retold tales in Western literature. Why, any thoughtful reader might ask, revisit such an old story? What relevance does a dusty war-myth have in the contemporary world? Troy level VI (Homeric period)excavated by Heinrich Schleimann The short answer is, I don’t know. Stories exist in the air all around us, and why we pluck one and not another when we reach up in an idle or desperate moment, I can’t say. But the long answer, if you have the time 1 to explore this with me, is that no matter what we are writing, every poem or story is a lifetime in the making, and this one stretches back a number of years. My interest in the Trojan War is an old one, inspired partly by a trip to Greece and Crete in May of 1975 when I first saw the archeological sites of the Mycenaean and Minoan cultures. That summer, I also had the chance to work on an Etruscan dig at Artimino, a village outside Florence where I was studying. But even before that, my fascination with the interface between history and mythology probably was kindled by my first reading of Homer’s and Virgil’s epics and the Oresteian Trilogy when I was in high school.
    [Show full text]
  • Laconian Clay and Bronze Oinochoae with Plastic Decora- Tions
    BaBesch 74 (1999) Laconian clay and bronze oinochoae with plastic decora- tions Paola Pelagatti and Conrad Stibbe Part 1 shown to have a Laconian provenance in the survey recently conducted in Sicily. Fragments of the same ware were also reported by D. Williams at Aegina, INTRODUCTION. in the sanctuary of Aphaia, and by R. Catling fol- lowing an extensive survey in Laconia itself1. When Arthur Lane wrote his fundamental study on The presence of this form2 – until recently almost Laconian pottery, published in BSA 34 (1933-'34) unattested outside Sparta – had already been 99-189, he did not have much to tell about Laconian reported by Boardman and Hayes on the other side oinochoae. Just half a page was enough for the of the Western Mediterranean, at Tocra (ancient whole story (p. 145). The shape was “very common Taucheira) in Libya3. at Sparta, but few were exported”, he noted. Some years earlier, E. Kunze and B. B. Shefton, Since then the situation has changed considerably. publishing material respectively from Olympia and Now we know that in fact many Laconian trefoil- Perachora4, had recognized two tiny palmettes with mouthed oinochoae, black-figured and, above all, snake finials as belonging to Laconian oinochoae, black-glazed, were exported from the second half of in the plastically decorated version. They had con- the seventh century, through most of the sixth B.C. nected them with some equally miniscule fragments With the help of bronze oinochoae, which recently from the sanctuary of Artemis Orthia at Sparta, have been identified as Laconian, the story of the where complete plain black forms are lacking.
    [Show full text]
  • Revista Romaneasca Pentru Educatie Multidimensionala
    Revista Romaneasca pentru Educatie Multidimensionala Romanian Journal for Multidimensional Education ISSN: 2066 – 7329 (print), ISSN: 2067 – 9270 (electronic) Covered in: Index Copernicus, Ideas RePeC, EconPapers, Socionet, Ulrich Pro Quest, Cabbel, SSRN, Appreciative Inquiry Commons, Journalseek, Scipio, EBSCO, DOAJ Aspecte ale ceramicii antichităţii pe teritoriul României: de la olăria profană la cea paleocreştină/ Aspects of Ancient Ceramics in Romania: from Secular to Paleo-Christian Pottery Ioana-Iulia OLARU Revista Romaneasca pentru Educatie Multidimensionala, 2013, Volume 5, Issue 1, June, pp:59-77 The online version of this article can be found at: http://revistaromaneasca.ro Published by: Lumen Publishing House On behalf of: Lumen Research Center in Social and Humanistic Sciences Aspecte ale ceramicii antichităţii pe teritoriul României: de la olăria profană la cea paleocreştină/ Aspects of Ancient Ceramics in Romania: from Secular to Paleo-Christian Pottery 1 Ioana-Iulia OLARU Abstract In the two border provinces – Dacia Traiana and Scythia Minor – ceramic pots prove the spreading of the Roman Empire’s art on the territory of our country today. One of the debated problems of the present paper is the propagandistic importance of this field of ornamental arts which, more easily and more rapidly than sculpture and architecture, brought the Roman features in all corners of the conquered world. Forms and decorations, and even their presence in the provinces was a proof of the existence of the Roman way of living in that area, in connection with the autochthonous basis and then, a proof of the spreading of the new religion, Christianity. Moreover, the present paper records the general aspects of pottery, and also the evolution of the technique used (from the procedures through which common pottery was used, to those of obtaining luxury ceramics – terra sigilata, terra estampata), but also the evolution of forms and their decor, from amphorae and big cley pots with two lugs, to cups and plates.
    [Show full text]
  • Plinthine on Lake Mareotis in 2013 Fieldwork at Kom El-Nugus (Plinthine) on Lake Mareotis Focused on a Large Mound Overlooking the Ancient Town
    EGYPTIAN ARCHAEOLOGY Plinthine on Lake Mareotis In 2013 fieldwork at Kom el-Nugus (Plinthine) on Lake Mareotis focused on a large mound overlooking the ancient town. Sylvain Dhennin and Bérangère Redon describe this settlement with archaic and classical Greek imports, raising questions about the history and nature of the site. 10km Satellite view of the Mareotis region of the north-west Delta. © BingMaps image adapted by Bérangère Redon The ancient Mareotis region is located on the north- western border of Egypt around Lake Mareotis (now Lake Mariut) and connected to the Canopic branch of the Nile via a network of canals. Following the foundation of Alexandria on its eastern limit in 332/331 BC, the region became a crucial area for contacts between Egypt and the Mediterranean world. Since 1998, the French Mission toTaposiris Magna (MFTM), directed by Marie- Françoise Boussac, has been investigating two sites: Abusir (ancient Taposiris Magna, see also EA 33, pp.12-14) and Kom el-Nugus, usually identified with Plinthine (see also inset on p.37). Their Ptolemaic and Roman past is well-attested, whereas the pharaonic history of the region is almost unknown, and few Egyptologists have shown much interest in it, with the notable exceptions of Anthony De Cosson, Alan Rowe and Jean Yoyotte. During the Twenty-Sixth Dynasty, a ‘gate’ - probably a fortress - named a3-n- 3zt-THnw (the ‘door of the foreign lands of ḫ Taposiris Magna and Plinthine. Plan by Thibaud Fournet (Institut the Libyans’) was probably located in the north-west of français du Proche-Orient) with Thomas Arnoux (Institut national de the area and can be identified with the ancient town of recherches archéologiques préventives) and Olivier Onézime (IFAO) Khaset-Tjemehou.
    [Show full text]
  • Centaurs in Ancient Art; the Archaic Period
    CENTAURS IN ANCIENT ART THE ARCHAIC PERIOD BY PAUL V. C. BAUR ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY YALE UNIVERSITY ^ITH 38 ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT AND 15 PLATES Wi KARL CURTIUS BERLIN BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME PROM THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND THE GIFT OF Menvg W. Sage 1S91 ...„:.... fiiJigsi : cirriij.. 5931 CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY All books are subject to recall after two weeks Oliri/Kroch Library 3 1924 072 600 863 DATE DUE hMI 1 ' ^FR ?: LJ002 MfilM mmt- ! ^ I'f q 1 ! GAYLORD PRINTED IN U.S.A. Cornell University mi Library '«=B The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://archive.org/details/cu31924072600863 CENTAURS IN ANCIENT ART 1 THE ARCHAIC PERIOD By PAUL V C. BAUR ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY YALE UNIVERSITY WITH 38 ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT AND 15 PLATES 19 12 KARL CURTIUS BERLIN hc'lvSt SPAMERSCHE BUCHDRUCKEREI IN LEIPZIG DEDICATED TO My WIFE PREFACE. The centaur in ancient literature has often been discussed, but so far as I know an exhaustive study of the centaur in ancient art has never been made. Such a study seemed to me worth while, especially since an erroneous impression concerning the development of the types has become almost universal, due to the limited horizon of those who have dealt only casually with this subject. For Nessos, Chiron and Pholos Stephani, Compte-Rendu 1865, 102 sqq. and 1873, 73 sqq., 90 sqq. has collected valuable material. I have attempted to catalogue the various types from the earliest times down to the end of the archaic period, 480 B.
    [Show full text]
  • THE ICONOGRAPHY of ATTIC LATE GEOMETRIC I I POTTERY VOLUME I THEODORA ROMBOS BEDFORD COLLEGE UNIVERSITY of LONDON Thesis S U
    THE ICONOGRAPHY OF ATTIC LATE GEOMETRIC I I POTTERY VOLUME I THEODORA ROMBOS BEDFORD COLLEGE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON Thesis submitted for the degree of Ph D March 1987 ■■ UiJL LViF' ■ ProQuest Number: 10098533 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest. ProQuest 10098533 Published by ProQuest LLC(2016). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 ABSTRACT The thesis is an attempt to view the iconography of A ttic vase-painting of the Late Geometric II period, in re­ latio n to the previous Late Geometric I period as well as the ensuing Early P rotoattic and to establish and in te rp re t the origin and meaning of the various iconographie themes. The main body of the work begins with a detailed look at those iconographie representations which are found in both Late Geometric I and Late Geometric II . The purely dec­ orative animal representations such as goats, deer and horses are studied f i r s t , while the more complex narrative scenes such as prothesis and chariot representations follow. Chapter II deals only with the Late Geometric II inno­ vations, for example riders, man and lions, as well as animals, grazing horses, bulls,dogs and fantastic animals such as cen­ taurs, sphinxes and winged goats.
    [Show full text]
  • Experience Clay, Art History, Narratives on Clay, a Global Interest
    lArt History What are some of these high- The ancient Greeks created lights? The narrative pottery of dramatic, detailed images ancient Greece is renowned for its on their ceramics. Ceramic artists first buffed the vase graceful forms and detailed com- surface, probably with a positional style (see Figs. 1–21 and stone or cloth. This pro- 1–22). Other cultures focused on cess enhanced the gloss sculpting figures in clay. Etruscans of the surface decoration. They then applied a coat crafted full-sized human figures of yellow-ochre, which from terracotta in the fifth cen- intensified the clay’s natural tury bce. In Africa, Nok full-sized reddish color. The iron oxide in the ochre was essential in creating the shiny surface Fig. 1–21. By reducing the amount of air of the black glaze. in the firing chamber, potters in ancient At first, artists painted Greece were able to cause their pots to change figures onto the vases and colors, producing dramatic black-figure ware. incised lines to create such Greek, Archaic Period, Amphora, ca. 500 bce. Black-figure details as facial features terracotta, 12⅝" (32 cm) high. The Cleveland Museum of Art. or clothing. When the pots Purchase from the J.H. Wade Fund, 1929.979. were fired in an atmosphere with reduced oxygen, the figures turned black, con- trasting with the red back- Art History ground. Later Greek ceramic artists developed the “red- figure” technique. They Narratives on Clay: painted the background black and left the figures red. The pots were fired in A Global Interest an atmosphere with greater Narrative art tells a story, and the remains in red.
    [Show full text]
  • The Campaign of 1938
    THE CAMPAIGN OF 1938 The excavation of the American Zone of the Athenian Agora has been continued on the usual large scale, the eighth season of work covering a period of twenty-one weeks, from January 24 to June 18. The present Report, like those of previous years, will give a comprehensive, non-technical, well-illustrated account of the results of of the compaign. Each year as the work has progressed the problems arising from the expropriation of the large area of excavation and from the administration of the business and scientific departments of the work have become increasingly simple of solution. This happy result has been achieved by the devotion and efficiency of A. Adossides, the business manager of the organization, and by the skill and ability of the attorney, A. Kyriakides, who has successfully defended the interests of the Agora before the various courts to which proprietors in many cases have made appeal, as they are privileged to do under the terms of the Agora law. Since practically all the cases have now been adjudicated, it is opportune to record that decisions by judges of all ranks have been rendered with clarity, promptness, and full justice to all con- cerned. At the outset of this project few Athenians believed that the colossal task of expropriating some three hundred and sixty pieces of property in the heart of the city could be achieved within any reasonable time. That this has actually been accom- plished within the projected span of ten years is due to the efficient functioning of the Agora organization which has been constantly supported and assisted by the au- thorities of the Greek Government.
    [Show full text]