A loutrophoros (Ancient Greek: λουτροφόρος; Greek etymology: λουτρόν/loutron and φέρω/pherō, English translation: "bathwater" and "carry") is a distinctive type of Greek pottery vessel characterized by an elongated neck with two handles. The loutrophoros was used to carry water for a bride's pre-nuptial ritual bath, and in funeral rituals, and was placed in the tombs of the unmarried.[1] The loutrophoros itself is a motif for Greek tombstones, either as a relief (for instance, the lekythos on the Stele of Panaetius) or as a stone vessel. There are many in the funeral area at the Kerameikos in Athens, some of which are now preserved in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens.
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Attic black-figure loutrophoros-hydria; late 6th century BC
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Attic black-figure loutrophoros-amphora with a prothesis scene, 510-500 BC
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Keramikos Museum, Athens, Marble loutrophoros from the grave of Agathon and Sosykrates
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Apulian egg-shaped loutrophoros (Apulian typus I, variant I), 330 BC
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Oversize ("huge") Apulian cylinder-shaped loutrophoros (Apulian typus II, variant I), 330 BC
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Apulian cylinder-shaped loutrophoros (Apulian typus II, variant II) by the Baltimore Painter; c. 330 BC; Museo Arqueológico Nacional de España (1998/92/2)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Richter, p. 57.
Sources
edit- Richter, Gisela M. A. (1928). A Newly Acquired Loutrophoros. The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Vol. 23, No. 2, Part 1, pp. 54–57.
Further reading
edit- Kokula, Gerit (1984). Marmorlutrophoren [Marble loutrophoroi]. Berlin: Gebr. Mann, ISBN 3-7861-1391-2 (in German).
- Mösch-Klingele, Rosmarie (2010). Braut ohne Bräutigam. Schwarz- und rotfigurige Lutrophoren als Spiegel gesellschaftlicher Veränderungen in Athen [Bride without groom. Black- and red-figure Lutrophoroi as a mirror of social change in Athens]. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern, ISBN 978-3-8053-4094-6 (in German).
- Παπαδοπούλου-Κανελλοπούλου, Χαρίκλεια (1997). Ιερό της Νύμφης. Μελανόμορφες λουτροφόροι [Sanctuary of the nymphs. Black-figured Loutrophoroi]. Athens, ISBN 960-214-104-2 (in Greek).
External links
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