Chapter XVII
.
Footnote 711:
x. 92. Liddell and Scott state that ἐρεύς is a _vox nihili_.
Footnote 712:
Pollux, x. 93.
Footnote 713:
xi. 476 E.
Footnote 714:
See _Brit. School Annual_, iii. (1896–97) p. 58; _Ath. Mitth._ 1898, p. 271; Couve in Daremberg and Saglio’s _Dict. s.v._ Kernos. Athenaeus cannot have known this type.
Footnote 715:
_Ath. Mitth._ 1898, pls. 13, 14; _Ephem. Arch._ 1885, pl. 9, 1897, p. 163 ff.
Footnote 716:
_Ath. Mitth._ _loc. cit._ p. 295.
Footnote 717:
See _Jahrbuch_, 1894, p. 57 ff.
Footnote 718:
Cf. Dem. _Fals. Leg._ p. 415, and p. 133 above.
Footnote 719:
Athen. xi. 784 B.
Footnote 720:
See Pollux, vii. 166; x. 63.
Footnote 721:
xi. 783 F; he derives the -βαλλος from βαλάντιον (_sic_). He also says it is like the αρύστιχος, and that ἀρυστίς = πρόχοος.
Footnote 722:
See Athen. xi. 784 D; Pollux, vi. 98; Hippokrates, 494, 55.
Footnote 723:
He somewhat vaguely identifies it with the Thericleian and Rhodian kylikes. Pollux (vi. 98) also implies it to be a cup.
Footnote 724:
See Ussing, p. 117; Pollux, vi. 106, x. 121; Ar. _Ach._ 1063.
Footnote 725:
Hesych. _s.v._ ῥύμμα. Also called σμηματοδοκίς.
Footnote 726:
_E.g._ B.M. 208, 225, 376, 386, 794, 810, D 65. But see on this shape Pernice in _Jahrbuch_, 1899, p. 68, and Robinson in _Boston Mus. Report_, 1899, p. 73. The latter rejects Pernice’s incense-burner theory (see above, p. 140), and suggests their use for perfume or scented water.
Footnote 727:
The B.M. has a late B.F. example, B 298.
Footnote 728:
_Jahrbuch___, 1899, p. 129.
Footnote 729:
E 774; E 810 in the B.M. is a good example of this form.
Footnote 730:
It was formerly thought to be a kind of roof-tile. See Robert in Ἐφ. Ἀρχ. 1892, p. 247; B.M. B 597, 598; Athens 1588–92.
Footnote 731:
See _B.M. Cat. of Vases_, iii. p. 17.
Footnote 732:
See _op. cit._ iv. p. 8, fig. 18.
Footnote 733:
In the examples from Greek sites, such as the Cyrenaica, the handle is arched over the back, as in Fig. 62.
Footnote 734:
For the Mycenaean “false amphora,” a variation of the askos, see p. 271 and Plate XV.
Footnote 735:
See Chapter XI . for a general discussion of the subject, and