Chapter XXII
., where the subject is discussed in detail.
Footnote 159:
_Aus ion. u. ital. Nekrop._ (1898); he also found Cyrenaic, Corinthian, and Attic pottery (p. 125 ff.). See below, p. 336.
Footnote 160:
See also _Arch. Zeit._ 1848, p. 280.
Footnote 161:
See Ross, _Reisen_, iv. p. 44.
Footnote 162:
Brongniart, _Traité_, i. p. 581 (plain wares only).
Footnote 163:
_J.H.S._ viii. p. 446. pl. 83.
Footnote 164:
Furtwaengler and Loeschcke, p. 33.
Footnote 165:
See Pottier, _Louvre Cat._ i. p. 130 ff.
Footnote 166:
See on the Geometrical pottery Pottier, _op. cit._ p. 136. It is probably imported, although Dümmler (_Jahrbuch_, 1891, p. 268) thinks otherwise.
Footnote 167:
There is at least one late R.F. vase from Crete in the National Museum at Athens (_Cat._ 1851, 1860, 1921). See for other instances of earlier finds, below, p. 269; Furtwaengler and Loeschcke, p. 22; Pottier, _Louvre Cat._ i. p. 176.
Footnote 168:
_Proc. Soc. Antiqs._ 2nd Ser. xv. (1895), p. 351 ff.
Footnote 169:
See _J.H.S._ xxiii. p. 157 ff. for an estimate of the Knossos pottery; also p. 265 below.
Footnote 170:
_British School Annual_, 1899–1900, p. 94 ff.; _J.H.S._ xxi. p. 78 ff.
Footnote 171:
_Ibid._ 1900–01, p. 121 ff.; _J.H.S._ xxiii. p. 248 ff.
Footnote 172:
_Ibid._ 1901–2, p. 289 ff.; 1902–3, p. 297.
Footnote 173:
_Rendiconti dell’ Accad. dei Lincei_, 1900, p. 631.
Footnote 174:
_American Journ. of Arch._ 1901, p. 371 ff., 302, 128; _British School Annual_, 1901–02, p. 235 (Praesos).
Footnote 175:
Nos. 98 and 99 in the collection of M. van Branteghem were two fine R.F. “aryballi” from Apollonia in Thrace.
Footnote 176:
The reader who wishes to gain a comprehensive idea of these vases is referred to the plates of the Atlas to Stephani’s _Compte-Rendu de la Comm. imp. arch. de St.-Pétersbourg_ (1861–83) = Reinach, _Répertoire_, i. p. 1 ff.
Footnote 177:
See also Jahn, _Vasens. zu München_, p. xxvii.
Footnote 178:
_Compte-Rendu_, 1870–71, pl. 4 = Reinach, i. 34.
Footnote 179:
See an interesting article in _Anzeiger_, 1900, p. 151, on the relations of the Black Sea colonies to Greece, especially in regard to pottery.
Footnote 180:
See Dörpfeld, _Troja und Ilion_, i. p. 304 ff.
Footnote 181:
So Jahn, _Vasens_. p. xxvii, but from the illustration given in Choiseul-Gouffier’s _Voyage pittoresque_, pt. 2, pl. 30, this seems doubtful.
Footnote 182:
Jahn, _Vasens_. p. xxvii.
Footnote 183:
_Monuments Piot_, x. pls. 6–7.
Footnote 184:
The style resembled that of B 80 in the Brit. Mus.
Footnote 185:
See Perrot, _Hist. de l’Art_, vi. pp. 929, 931. The British Museum possesses a similar one from Kalymnos (p. 273).
Footnote 186:
_Ion. u. ital. Nekrop._ pp. 86–7.
Footnote 187:
_Louvre Cat._ ii. p. 274; Pottier and Reinach, _Nécropole de Myrina_, pp. 221, 499; _Bull. de Corr. Hell._ 1884, p. 509; _Ath. Mitth._ 1887, p. 228.
Footnote 188:
_Röm. Mitth._ 1888, pl. 6; now in Brit. Mus.
Footnote 189:
See generally