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Agate sealstone in the form of a scarab: a satyr with a wine-cup

-550/-500

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Satyrs, mythical creatures that were part-man and part-horse, were followers of the Greek wine-god Dionysos. It is appropriate then that the satyr shown here is waving a wine cup over a bowl designed for mixing wine and water. Around 550 BC, the Greeks rediscovered the art of engraving hard stones with a drill, an art forgotten since the Bronze Age. The inspiration for the rediscovery, and the rounded scarab beetle shape into which the backs were almost always carved, may well have reached Greece from Phoenicia. Many seals of this type have been found set into rings. Finely carved examples such as this would have been both a practical way of marking ownership and a decorative piece of jewellery. It is not easy to decide where this seal was made, but satyrs with horse's feet seem most at home either in the Greek east, or in the western Greek colonies of southern Italy and Sicily. Enlarged images of this sealstone give the impression that it is in real life much larger than it really is: so much intricate detail has been packed into a tiny space.

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  • Title: Agate sealstone in the form of a scarab: a satyr with a wine-cup
  • Date Created: -550/-500
  • Physical Dimensions: Length: 2.20cm; Width: 1.60cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: engraved
  • Subject: satyr
  • Registration number: 1865,0712.106
  • Production place: Made in Etruria
  • Producer: Attributed to Master of London Satyr
  • Period/culture: Graeco-Etruscan
  • Material: agate
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Castellani, Alessandro
British Museum

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