Oud-Grieks Aardewerk Lekythos (Zonder Minimumprijs)






Was directeur van het Ifergan Collection Museum, gespecialiseerd in Fenicische archeologie.
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| € 59 | ||
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Griekse lekythos van aardewerk, uit de 3e eeuw v.Chr., 80 × 55 mm, in goede staat, in 2025 verworven uit een Duitse privécollectie, met certificaat van echtheid en EU-exportvergunning.
Beschrijving van de verkoper
ITEM: Lekythos
MATERIAL: Pottery
CULTURE: Greek
PERIOD: 3rd Century B.C
DIMENSIONS: 80 mm x 55 mm
CONDITION: Good condition
PROVENANCE: Ex German private collection, F.B., acquired in European antiquities auctions between 2000 - 2009.
PARALLEL: Acropolis Museum, Excavation Museum, Case 13, No 3
Comes with Certificate of Authenticity and European Union export license
If you bid outside European Union and win the item, we must request a new export license to your country and the shipment will delay between 3 - 5 weeks.
The Greek lekythos (plural: lekythoi) is a distinct type of ancient Greek pottery vessel characterized by its tall, slender, and often cylindrical body, narrow neck, single loop handle, and flat base. Primarily functioning as an oil flask, it was designed to store and pour expensive liquids, such as olive oil, perfumes, and ointments. The vessel's narrow neck was a deliberate feature, restricting the flow to a thin stream to conserve the valuable oil, which was used both in daily life—for bathing and anointing the body at the gymnasium—and most significantly, in funerary rites. While other shapes were also used for oil, the lekythos became overwhelmingly associated with the practices surrounding death.
During the Classical period (5th century BCE), particularly in Athens, the lekythos became the quintessential grave offering. Its use shifted from a general oil flask to a vessel specifically intended for the dead, often found deposited in tombs or left at the grave site as a libation vessel during mourning ceremonies. The fragility of the oil, meant to anoint the deceased, mirrored the finality and delicacy of death itself. This funerary function led to the widespread adoption of the specialized White-Ground technique for decorating these vases. This method involved coating the reddish clay body with a creamy white slip, which was less durable than the standard black- or red-figure painting but allowed for a wider range of colors and more delicate, expressive brushwork, fitting the solemn context.
The scenes painted on funerary lekythoi provide invaluable insight into ancient Greek beliefs about death and the afterlife. The narrow body often features a single, focused scene, typically depicting rituals at the tomb, such as the prothesis (laying out of the dead), the deceased warrior's departure, or visits by mourners who bring offerings. Other common motifs include mythological scenes of transition, like Hermes (the conductor of souls) leading the deceased, or Charon (the ferryman of the dead). In the 4th century BCE, the form was even translated into monumental marble sculptures, which, standing up to a meter tall, served as impressive and lasting grave markers, adapting the ritual offering into a permanent memorial to the deceased.
De verkoper stelt zich voor
ITEM: Lekythos
MATERIAL: Pottery
CULTURE: Greek
PERIOD: 3rd Century B.C
DIMENSIONS: 80 mm x 55 mm
CONDITION: Good condition
PROVENANCE: Ex German private collection, F.B., acquired in European antiquities auctions between 2000 - 2009.
PARALLEL: Acropolis Museum, Excavation Museum, Case 13, No 3
Comes with Certificate of Authenticity and European Union export license
If you bid outside European Union and win the item, we must request a new export license to your country and the shipment will delay between 3 - 5 weeks.
The Greek lekythos (plural: lekythoi) is a distinct type of ancient Greek pottery vessel characterized by its tall, slender, and often cylindrical body, narrow neck, single loop handle, and flat base. Primarily functioning as an oil flask, it was designed to store and pour expensive liquids, such as olive oil, perfumes, and ointments. The vessel's narrow neck was a deliberate feature, restricting the flow to a thin stream to conserve the valuable oil, which was used both in daily life—for bathing and anointing the body at the gymnasium—and most significantly, in funerary rites. While other shapes were also used for oil, the lekythos became overwhelmingly associated with the practices surrounding death.
During the Classical period (5th century BCE), particularly in Athens, the lekythos became the quintessential grave offering. Its use shifted from a general oil flask to a vessel specifically intended for the dead, often found deposited in tombs or left at the grave site as a libation vessel during mourning ceremonies. The fragility of the oil, meant to anoint the deceased, mirrored the finality and delicacy of death itself. This funerary function led to the widespread adoption of the specialized White-Ground technique for decorating these vases. This method involved coating the reddish clay body with a creamy white slip, which was less durable than the standard black- or red-figure painting but allowed for a wider range of colors and more delicate, expressive brushwork, fitting the solemn context.
The scenes painted on funerary lekythoi provide invaluable insight into ancient Greek beliefs about death and the afterlife. The narrow body often features a single, focused scene, typically depicting rituals at the tomb, such as the prothesis (laying out of the dead), the deceased warrior's departure, or visits by mourners who bring offerings. Other common motifs include mythological scenes of transition, like Hermes (the conductor of souls) leading the deceased, or Charon (the ferryman of the dead). In the 4th century BCE, the form was even translated into monumental marble sculptures, which, standing up to a meter tall, served as impressive and lasting grave markers, adapting the ritual offering into a permanent memorial to the deceased.
De verkoper stelt zich voor
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De verkoper is door Catawiki geïnformeerd over de documentatievereisten en garandeert het volgende: - het object is op legale wijze verkregen, - de verkoper is gerechtigd om het object te verkopen en/of te exporteren, indien van toepassing, - de verkoper zal de nodige informatie over de herkomst aanleveren en, indien van toepassing en in overeenstemming met de lokale wetgeving, de vereiste documentatie en vergunningen regelen, - de verkoper zal de koper op de hoogte stellen van eventuele vertragingen bij het verkrijgen van de benodigde vergunningen. Door een bod uit te brengen, erken je dat voor de import mogelijk documentatie vereist is, afhankelijk van het land waar je woont, en dat het verkrijgen van vergunningen kan leiden tot vertraging in de levering van je object.
De verkoper is door Catawiki geïnformeerd over de documentatievereisten en garandeert het volgende: - het object is op legale wijze verkregen, - de verkoper is gerechtigd om het object te verkopen en/of te exporteren, indien van toepassing, - de verkoper zal de nodige informatie over de herkomst aanleveren en, indien van toepassing en in overeenstemming met de lokale wetgeving, de vereiste documentatie en vergunningen regelen, - de verkoper zal de koper op de hoogte stellen van eventuele vertragingen bij het verkrijgen van de benodigde vergunningen. Door een bod uit te brengen, erken je dat voor de import mogelijk documentatie vereist is, afhankelijk van het land waar je woont, en dat het verkrijgen van vergunningen kan leiden tot vertraging in de levering van je object.
