Eckhard Deschler-Erb, Philippe Della Casa (eds.). New Research on Ancient Bronzes. Acta of the XVIIIth International Congress on Ancient Bronzes. Zurich Studies in Archaeology, Vol. 10, 2015, 77–83.
Contextualizing a set of classical bronze vessels from Macedonia Despina Ignatiadou Despina Ignatiadou, Formerly Curator of Metalwork, Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki, Curator of Sculpture, National Archaeological Museum, Athens, dignatiadou@culture.gr Among the objects of a private collection donated to the Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki are five bronze vessels which probably originate in the same burial: a ladle, an “achaemenid-style” almond phiale, a small round jug, a plain or handled phiale, and a handled lebes. Analysis showed that all the vessels are composed of high-tin bronzes. The available evidence indicates that the vessels were interred in a single burial, in a cemetery which has not yet been identified. Comparison of the vessels with excavated finds from northern Greece helps date them to the first half of the 5th century B. C. Key words: vessels, Macedonia, high-tin bronze, classical period, contextualization
1. Introduction Recent excavation activity in Macedonian cemeteries has revealed a large number of bronze vessels from the Archaic and Classical periods. Additionally, several unprovenanced vessels have been added to museum collections, either as donations or as confiscated finds of illegal digs. Part of the Mitsobounis private collection was donated to the Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki (Protocol nr. 7472 / 19. 10. 1987). The collection comprises hundreds of ancient objects of different materials, among them metal vessels, jewelry and arms. Their typological and stylistic examination shows that they were mostly found in Macedonia, possibly its central part. Eight bronze vessels in the collection are dated to the late archaic and the classical period and appear in a variety of shapes: a handled lebes, two different kinds of phiale, two jugs, a strainer, two ladles and some handles. Among them
we can single out five vessels which probably originate from the same burial. These were given consecutive collection inventory numbers, perhaps meaning they were also acquired as a group. With variations, these shapes appear as a set in local burials of the classical period. This particular (possible) set consists of a ladle, an “achaemenid-style” almond phiale, a small round jug, a plain or handled phiale, and a handled lebes.
2. Catalogue 2.1. Bronze ladle SM 355 Bronze ladle with small deep bowl and long handle ending in a swan’s head (fig. 1, 2.1). The bowl is slightly tapered into a flat plain rim and is placed at an obtuse angle and continuous to the straight handle. The latter starts from the bowl as a triangular strip, then continues as a shaft which is rectangular in cross-section, curves at the top and ends in the
2.1 Fig. 1. Bronze ladle SM 355. (Photo: D. Ignatiadou)
2.2
2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
Fig. 2. Bronze ladles from central Macedonia, 5th century B. C. (Compilation: D. Ignatiadou)
77