Mycenaean Terracotta Three-Handled Jar, 14 Century BCE - 13th Century BCE
Terracotta
height 14.6 cm
height 5 3/4 in
height 5 3/4 in
X.0291
Further images
The Mycenaean culture dominated Greece during the Bronze Age with its power, art, and wealth. According to legend, the city of Mycenae was founded by the hero Perseus on the...
The Mycenaean culture dominated Greece during the Bronze Age with its power, art, and wealth. According to legend, the city of Mycenae was founded by the hero Perseus on the shores of the Peloponniese. A land of valiant warriors, Mycenae is celebrated by Homer as the home of Agamemnon, the heroic king who led the Greeks to victory against Troy. Furthermore, recent archaeological excavations of Mycenaean palaces attest to their wealth, described by Homer as “:Mycenae, rich in gold.” Culturally, the Mycenaeans were heavily indebted to the Minoan civilization of Crete. Noted for their utilitarian pottery, Mycenaean vessels have been excavated throughout the Mediterranean, attesting wide range of their influence on the art and commerce of the ancient world. The script of Linear B was employed by Mycenaean scribes to record their early Greek language. Linear B would replace Linear A, the script of the Minoans, on Crete, revealing that the Mycenaeans would grow to dominate the civilization they grew out of. Although the Mycenaean civilization began to mysteriously decline after the 13th Century B.C., ruins of their constructions, described as Cyclopean because early historians thought only the Cyclops was capable of building with such large boulders, survive today, testifying to the greatness of this ancient culture.
This terracotta jar features a compressed globular body that rests upon a flattened round base. The short concave neck has an everted rim. Three loop handles are attached to the shoulder interspersed with painted tongues in a reserved band. As well, orange-brown painted decoration consisting of sets of broad bands containing finer ones adorns the rim, upper shoulder and body. The base is decorated with concentric circles.
This terracotta jar features a compressed globular body that rests upon a flattened round base. The short concave neck has an everted rim. Three loop handles are attached to the shoulder interspersed with painted tongues in a reserved band. As well, orange-brown painted decoration consisting of sets of broad bands containing finer ones adorns the rim, upper shoulder and body. The base is decorated with concentric circles.
Provenance
The Heidi Vollmoeller Collection, Acquired in 1988.Christie's, Sale 9722, Lot 530, The Heidi Vollmoeller Collection Sale, London, South Kensington, 29 October 2003