Decoration: A: YOUTH IN PETASOS, CHLAMYS, CHITONISKOS AND BOOTS ATTACKING WITH SWORD (POLYNEIKES ?) B: MAN IN PETASOS, CHLAMYS, CHITONISKOS AND BOOTS WITH SWORD (ADRASTOS ?)
Last Recorded Collection: Berlin, Antikensammlung: F2316
Previous Collections:
Dresden, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Albertinum: o. Inv.
Publication Record: Archäologische Zeitung: 1854, PL.68 Beazley, J.D., Attic Red-Figure Vase-Painters, 2nd edition (Oxford, 1963): 1559.1 Beazley, J.D., Attic Red-figure Vase-painters, 1st ed. (Oxford, 1942): 217.16 Beazley, J.D., Attic Red-figure Vase-painters, 1st ed. (Oxford, 1942): 217.16 Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum: BERLIN, ANTIKENSAMMLUNG-PERGAMONMUSEUM 1, 50-51, FIG.2, PL.(143) 32.1-2 View Whole CVA Plates Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum: DRESDEN, STAATLICHE KUNSTSAMMLUNGEN - SKULPTURENSAMMLUNG 3, 126, PL.() Flashar, M. and Hiesel, G., Konturen, Vasen der Berliner Antikensammlung in Freiburg (Munich, 1997): 46-47, NO.16 (COLOUR OF A AND B) Journal of Hellenic Studies: 51 (1931) 55 Lücken, G. von, Griechische Vasenbilder (Berlin, 1921): PLS.49-50 Schmidt, S. and Stähli, A. (eds.), Vasenbilder im Kulturtransfer, Zirkulation und Rezeption griechischer Keramik im Mittelmeerraum, Beiheft zum Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum Deutschland V (Munich, 2012): 70, FIG.1 (A, B)
CAVI Footnotes: {1} some resemblance to Onesimos (P), but not enough to class the vase as in
his manner (ARV[2]); in ARV[1] 217/16 said to be in the manner of the Panaitios
Painter. {2} Furtw. thinks he is attacking; Beazley, that he may be a companion
of the man on A. {3} given as a two-liner in Furtw.'s text. The name here
without rough breathing: see Threatte (1980), 501 and ii, 748 and 759.
CAVI Comments: + ex Dresden (see JHS), not inscribed. - Beazley says the last word is
misspelled; Furtw. suggested: Χσυννοοῦντι, or as Beazley puts it: Χσυννοῦντι;
see also Rumpf (1938), 457; in ARV[2] 110/9, Agora P 9356, [--]νοον may be from
the same name. LGPN ii has the name Συννών. It could also be ptc. of συννοέω,
`to think upon'. According to N. Slater in: Signs of Orality (Mnemosyne suppl.
188, 1999) 143 n. 2 it was Furtwängler who first considered the last word as a
ptc of συννοεέω (χσυννοῦντι).