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A work made of terracotta, black-figure.

Amphoriskos (Container for Oil)

600-575 BCE

Greek; Corinth

Corinth

Located on the narrow isthmus that joins the Greek mainland and the Peloponnese, with natural harbors facing east and west, Corinth was the major port of trade in Greece for most of the Archaic period (700–480 BCE). Producers exported scented oil around the Mediterranean in terracotta containers like this one known as an amphoriskos, literally a "little amphora," that survive today in the thousands.

terracotta, black-figure

Arts of Greece, Rome, and Byzantium