Argilos Argilos    
FrançaisEnglishΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ  
HomePresentationHistoryExcavationFinancingField SchoolReferencesLinksContacts
   

1. «PRE» AND «PARA» COLONIAL ACTIVITIES

2. POTTERY STYLES OF
THE 7th CENTURY B.C. GREEK POTTERY

3. POTTERY STYLES OF THE 7th CENTURY B.C. LOCAL AND REGIONAL POTTERY

4. 6th - 5th CENTURIES B.C. URBANISM AND ECONOMY

5. HOUSE "A" DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE AT ARGILOS

6. 6th CENTURY B.C. POTTERY STYLES

7. 5th - 4th CENTURIES B.C. URBANISM AND ECONOMY

8. BUILDING "E" AN EXAMPLE OF PUBLIC ARCHITECTURE

9. 5th - 4th CENTURY B.C. POTTERY FIGURINE AND SMALL OBJECTS

10. THE HELLENISTIC SETTLEMENT OF THE ACROPOLIS AND THE END
OF THE CITY

11. THE OLIVE PRESSING INSTALLATION ON THE ACROPOLIS

12. THE NECROPOLIS
OF ARGILOS

13. THE COINAGE
OF ARGILOS

14. ARGILOS EPIGRAPHICAL EVIDENCE


Pottery Styles of the 7th Century B.C. - Local and Regional Pottery
As the regional and local pottery, the greek pottery found in 7th century B.C. levels in Argilos can be separated into two groups : vases originating from Eastern Greek cities and others produced in the Cycladic islands. In both cases, the shapes are mainly drinking vessels: cups, bowls, and skyphoi. East Greek production consists of « bird bowls », a type of cup characteristic of this period, on which the painters represented waterbirds placed between hatched lozenges and groups of vertical lines. These bowls were made in many East Greek cities, mainly in Northern Ionia, and widely distributed in the Mediterranean.


East Greek "bird bowls", 7th century B.C..

The cycladic vases consist of skyphoi, mugs, and lekanai. The skyphoi show a particular shape: they have a deep body with a peculiar concave/convex curve. On 7th century examples, the lip is small and flares out, whereas it is strait and, therefore, higher with those belonging to the 6th century B.C. Scholars thought that this type of skyphos was made on the island of Siphnos as many specimens were found amongst the offerings of a temple brought to light there. However, given the fact that Greek colonists used to import their everyday pottery from their mother-city, the great quantity of such skyphoi found at Argilos now suggests another area, the island of Andros, as production centre.



Cycladic skyphos, beginning of 6th century B.C.


© University of Montreal, Argilos, 2009. All rights reserved.
Web design : tropicalico.com