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Black-on-Red ware flask in the form of an ox

-750/-600

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Black-on-Red ware was introduced to Cyprus from Phoenicia (modern Lebanon), but from the mid-ninth century BC the Cypriots made their own versions. As the name suggests, the designs are painted in black on a red ground. The shapes in the local repertoire included some of Phoenician origin such as deep bowls with linear decoration and flat-bottomed juglets, while others imitated those made in other local fabrics. This flask may be described by the Greek name askos, meaning wineskin. Most Greek askoi are smaller and flatter and more suitable as dispensers of oil for lamps, but this example could have been a wine flask. This vessel was made when the pottery styles show regional variations. It comes from Kourion in the west of the island and it was here and in the north that potters specialized in intricate shapes decorated with elaborate patterns of circles.

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  • Title: Black-on-Red ware flask in the form of an ox
  • Date Created: -750/-600
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 22.00cm; Height: 19.05cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: wheel-made; slipped; painted; hand-modelled
  • Subject: mammal
  • Registration number: 1896,0201.2
  • Production place: Made in Cyprus
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Kourion
  • Period/culture: Cypro-Archaic I
  • Material: pottery
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Excavated by Turner Bequest Excavations, Curium. Funded by Turner, Emma Tourner
British Museum

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