icon

[Corinth Notebook] 114

Kerameikos 1930-1931 (III) ... Newhall, A.E ... Microfilmed before 1967 ... 07/06/1930 - 03/04/1931

icon

[Corinth Object] KP 669: LEKANIS

Small lekanis with hollow ring foot with disc at center, marks from cut on disc, convex body, rounded lip and vertical flange slightly inturned; two reflex handles attached at rim. Foot similar to KP 668 ... Late 5th-4th c. BC (Stillwell and Benson 1984, Corinth 15.3, p. 211)

icon

[Corinth Object] KP 670: PYXIS LID

Pyxis lid cover with wide, horizontal rim and deeply inset tapered flange, conical body, slightly concave knob with thick shank. Similar to feeder lid from North Cemetery (Corinth 13, pl. 71: 449-1). Incised ... mid-4th or 3rd quarter of 4th c. BC, Stillwell's (1948) date for Deposit 6 in Corinth 15.1: 43.

icon

[Corinth Object] KP 685: PYXIS LID

Pyxis lid with convex top with two channels surrounding central boss, low sides slanting outward to rounded lip and high flange with rounded lip. Two wide channels incised around central boss, one wide ... 350-325 B.C., according to Edwards as quoted in Corinth 15.3, p. 351

icon

[Corinth Object] KP 704: ROUND-BODIED OINOCHOE

Small oionchoe with flaring disc foot with flat undersurface with string marks, globular body with nearly straight sides, low and wide neck, flaring trefoil rim with rounded lip, front lobe of trefoil ... Late 5th-4th c. BC (Stillwell and Benson 1984, Corinth 15.3, p. 211)

icon

[Corinth Object] KT 74005: TERRACOTTA OBJECT

Two long, irregular rolls bound together at the center by applied strip. Rolls slightly bent in center and taper at ends. Surfaces roughly scratched with irregular grooves. At one side appears part of ... 4th century B.C. (Stillwell 1954, Corinth 15.2, cat. 64, p. 242)

icon

[Corinth Object] KT 75002: TERRACOTTA DISK

Heavy handmade disk with undersurface curved upwards to edge. Upper surface modelled in three heave, rounded, irregular concentric rings with round boss in center. Grooves between rings deep and irregular ... Middle to the 3rd quarter of the 4th c. B.C. (Stillwell 1948, Corinth 15.1, p. 43)