Glass oinochoe (perfume jug)
Eastern Mediterranean or South Italian
Translucent cobalt blue, with handle and pad-base in same color; trails in opaque yellow, opaque white, and opaque turquoise blue.
Applied trefoil rim-disk with long spout; cylindrical neck; narrow angular shoulder; straight-sided cylindrical body, expanding downward, and then curving in to applied low circular pad-base with uneven flattish bottom; strap handle attached in pad to upper body over trail decoration, drawn up and round in a loop, arching above the rim-disk, and pressed onto back of rim-disk and top of neck.
A fine yellow trail attached at edge of rim-disk; another unmarvered yellow trail wound spirally five and a quarter times around neck; a third yellow trail, marvered, begun on shoulder and wound round on body, tooled into a feather pattern and extending as far as the point of greatest diameter; mingling with it in alternating bands, turquoise blue and white trails in nine vertical panels with alternating upward and downward strokes; a fine turquoise blue trail wound round edge of pad-base.
Intact, except for weathered chip in rim-disk; dulling, pitting, and much of surface covered with creamy white weathering and iridescence.
Among the rarer shapes of Mediterranean Group II vessels are the tall, slender oinochoe (jug/pitcher) with a trefoil spout and the lentoid aryballos with twisted glass canes running between the ring handles.
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