A Basic Guide to Ancient Greek pottery shapes. Greek vases were used by the Greeks pri­mar­ily to store, trans­port, and drink such liq­uids as wine and wa­ter. Smaller pots were used as con­tain­ers for per­fumes and unguents.

Ancient Greek pottery shapes

Ancient Greek potteryPottery Useful containers such as bowls, dishes, plates and mugs made from soft clay that is baked hard in an oven called a kiln. shapes: the pure and useful forms of Greek vases

Al­abas­tron

Al­abas­tra were small Greek vases used by women for stor­ing per­fume or oil.

Am­phora

Am­phora means ”to carry on both sides.” Am­phorae were used for car­ry­ing and stor­ing solids and liq­uids.

Chous

Choes were jugs. Small ver­sions of these were as­so­ci­ated with the young. Choes are usu­ally dec­o­rated with chil­dren, per­haps learn­ing to crawl or play­ing with toy carts as in this case.

When boys were 3 years old, they were given a chous filled with wine at the An­thes­te­ria fes­ti­val. They would be al­lowed to drink the wine to prove that they were on their way to be­ing men. Some­times choes were put in the graves of chil­dren.

Chy­tra

Chy­trai were cook­ing pots. The fact that these large pots are clumsy, un­dec­o­rated and made out of rough clay is a big clue to their func­tion. Chy­trai are ba­sic cook­ing pots, used for heat­ing wa­ter or soup on the fire.

Hy­dria

Hy­driai were used to carry wa­ter. One of the daily du­ties for women was to col­lect wa­ter from the com­mu­nal foun­tain. For Greek cit­i­zens it was im­por­tant that women stayed at home as much as pos­si­ble, so usu­ally it was the slave women who queued at the foun­tain and chat­ted with each other, be­fore car­ry­ing their heavy load back in large hy­driai.

Kan­tharos

Kan­tharoi were drink­ing cups with two ver­ti­cal han­dles.

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Krater

Krater comes from a word mean­ing ”mix”. Kraters were Greek vases used for mix­ing wine with wa­ter.

The Greeks thought it un­civ­i­lized to drink their wine neat, so these large bowls were used to mix wine with wa­ter. Kraters were used at drink­ing par­ties called sym­posia, where men would talk and en­joy the com­pany of male friends, whilst their wives were pre­vented from tak­ing part.

Kylix

Ky­likes were spe­cial wine cups. Ky­likes were used at sym­posia, which were af­ter-din­ner drink­ing par­ties for men.

Leka­nis

Lekanides were small, shal­low bowls used by women for stor­ing jew­ellery and trin­kets. Lekanides were of­ten given as wed­ding gifts.

Lekythos

Lekythoi were olive oil bot­tles es­pe­cially used for fu­ner­als and as grave gifts. The olive oil was an of­fer­ing to the dead per­son.

Loutrophoros

The name for this large vase means ”car­ry­ing to the bath.” Loutrophoroi were used to hold wa­ter for bridal bathing or for wash­ing bod­ies be­fore bur­ial.

For her spe­cial day, a Greek woman would be washed and per­fumed be­fore putting on fine clothes and jew­ellery.

Be­fore be­ing placed in tombs, dead bod­ies were cer­e­mo­ni­ally washed and pre­pared by women. This wa­ter was some­times stored in loutrophoroi.

Oinochoe

Oinochoai were wine jugs.

Psyk­ter

Psyk­teres were wine cool­ers. Psyk­teres were spe­cial items for the sym­po­sium. The psyk­ter would be filled with ice-cold wa­ter and set in the mid­dle of a large bowl (a krater) filled with wine, so as to cool it.

Pyxis

Pyx­ides were small pots in which women stored their cos­met­ics, pow­der or jew­ellery. Women used cer­tain plants and types of sea­weed as a form of rouge. They would also darken their eye­brows with char­coal, and lighten their skin with a whitener made from lead and vine­gar.

Stam­nos

Stam­noi were used for hold­ing wine be­fore mix­ing it with wa­ter. Stam­noi could be used at sym­posia, which were af­ter-din­ner drink­ing par­ties for men.



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