Vases Red-figure Amphora Panathenaic Amphora: Libation and Sacrifice
Panathenaic Amphora: Libation and Sacrifice
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Panathenaic Amphora: Libation and Sacrifice

Red-figure Group of Polygnotos · Amphora · c. 420 BCE
Red-figure Panathenaic Amphora. Side A: Low altar flanked by a bearded man pouring libation and a youth holding an oinochoe. The youth holds the vessel in his right hand and round objects, which may be astragaloi, in his left hand (Bundrick 2014). The bearded man wears a chiton and an ependytes, with a decorative pattern and adorned with a woven wreath in the center. He also holds similar round objects in his left hand and pours a libation from a kantharos with his right hand. The wine for the libation, which is added with red paint over the black, pours out onto a low mound, which is either an earthen mound with the curling tail of a sacrifical bull or a shield with a snake protome.
Side B: Poorly preserved. Youth holding a kanoun (sacrificial basket). He wears his himation tied around his waist, in a manner similar to the way in which the youth on the reverse side is dressed.
Shape
Technique
Period
Classical period, High
Date
c. 420 BCE
Culture
Greek
Attribution
Circle of
Dimensions
H: 86.36 cm
Findspot
Ancient & Byzantine World, Europe, Attica
Museum
Harvard Art Museums
Accession Number
1960.371
Image Source
harvard
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)