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Rhyton

A rhyton /ˈrˌtɒn, ˈrtən/ (pl.: rhytons or, following the Greek plural, rhyta) is a roughly conical container from which fluids were intended to be drunk or to be poured in some ceremony such as libation, or merely at table. A rhyton is typically formed in the shape of an animal's head. Items were produced over large areas of ancient Eurasia, especially from Persia to the Balkans. Many have an opening at the bottom through which the liquid fell; others did not, and were merely used as drinking cups, with the characteristic that they could not usually be set down on a surface without spilling their contents.

Rhyton
Golden rhyton from Iran's Achaemenid period, excavated at Ecbatana. At the National Museum of Iran.
MaterialCeramic, metal, horn, stone
SizeCup-size for practical use, larger for ceremonial use, typically in a roughly conical shape caused by a spout or a pseudo-spout at the bottom.
WritingMay be inscribed and otherwise decorated
CreatedPrehistoric times through the present
Silver rhyton with goat protome and death of Orpheus, c. 420–410 BC, housed in the Vassil Bojkov Collection, Sofia, Bulgaria. The horn in a continuous and graceful curve makes a right-angled bend. Its lower two thirds are covered by flutes with arc-shaped upper tips. A figural scene below the flaring rim represents the murder of Orpheus. The musician is the central figure, fallen to his right knee, flanked by three attacking Thracian women. He holds a six-string lyre on his right hand and with his left one, wrapped in his mantle, a knobbed wooden stick, with which he tries vainly to protect himself.[1]

The English word rhyton originates in the ancient Greek word ῥυτόν (rhy̆tón or rhŭtón). The conical rhyton form has been known in the Aegean region since the Bronze Age, or the 2nd millennium BC. However, it was by no means confined to that region. Similar in form to, and perhaps originating from, the drinking horn, it has been widespread over Eurasia since prehistoric times.

Name and function edit

Liddell and Scott[2] give a standard derivation from Greek rhein, "to flow", which, according to Julius Pokorny,[3] is from Indo-European *sreu-, "flow". As rhutos is "stream", the neuter, rhuton, would be some sort of object associated with pouring, which is equivalent to English pourer. Many vessels considered rhytons featured a wide mouth at the top and a hole through a conical constriction at the bottom from which the fluid ran. The idea is that one scooped wine or water from a storage vessel or similar source, held it up, unstoppered the hole with one's thumb, and let the fluid run into the mouth (or onto the ground in libation) in the same way that wine is drunk from a wineskin today.

Smith points out[4] that this use is testified in classical paintings and accepts Athenaeus's etymology that it was named ἀπὸ τῆς ῥύσεως, "from the flowing".[5] Smith also categorized the name as having been a recent form (in classical times) of a vessel formerly called the keras, "horn", in the sense of a drinking horn.[6] The word rhyton is not present in what is known about Mycenaean Greek, the oldest form of Greek written in Linear B. However, the bull's head rhyton, of which many examples survive, is mentioned as ke-ra-a on tablet KN K 872,[7] an inventory of vessels at Knossos; it is shown with the bull ideogram (*227VAS; also known as rhyton). Ventris and Chadwick restored the word as the adjective *kera(h)a, with a Mycenaean intervocalic h.[8]

 
A rhyton drinking vessel with animal details; such vessels were widely produced in Persia during the Achaemenid Empire (550–330 BC), though the lifelike animal details as seen in this one date from the later Parthian Empire (247 BC – AD 224).
 
A rhyton wine horn with lion protome, Iran, Parthian period, 1st century BC – 1st century AD, silver and gilt, housed in the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery

Rhyta shaped after bulls are filled through the large opening and emptied through the secondary, smaller one. This means that two hands are required: one to close the secondary opening and one to fill the rhyton. This has led some scholars to believe that rhytons were typically filled with the help of two people or with the help of a chain or a rope that would be passed through a handle. Rhytons modeled after animals were designed to make it look like the animal was drinking when the vessel was being filled.[citation needed] A bull rhyton weighed about three kilograms when empty and up to six kilograms when full.

Other rhytons with animal themes were modeled after boars, lions, and lionesses (such as Lion head horn). Some shapes, such as lioness rhyta, could be filled through simple submersion, thanks to the vessel's shape and buoyancy. Horizontally designed rhyta, like those modeled after lionesses, could be filled by being lowered into a fluid and supported. Vertically designed rhyta, like those modeled after boars, required another hand to cover the primary opening and to prevent the liquid from spilling as the vessel was filled.

Rhyta were often used to strain liquids such as wine, beer, and oil. Some rhyta were used in blood rituals and animal sacrifice. In these cases, the blood may have been thinned with wine. Some vessels were modeled after the animal with which they were intended to be used during ritual, but this was not always the case.[9]

Wide provenance edit

 
Roman fresco from Herculaneum demonstrating the use of a rhyton, c. 50 BC

It cannot be proven that every drinking horn or libation vessel was pierced at the bottom, especially in the prehistoric phases of the form. The scoop function would have come first. Once the holes began, however, they invited zoomorphic interpretation and plastic decoration in the forms of animal heads—bovids, equines, cervids, and even canines—with the fluid pouring from the animals' mouths.

Rhyta occur among the remains of civilizations speaking different languages and language groups in and around the Near and Middle East, such as Persia, from the second millennium BC. They are often shaped like animals' heads or horns and can be very ornate and compounded with precious metals and stones. In Minoan Crete, silver-and-gold bulls' heads with round openings for the wine (permitting wine to pour from the bulls' mouths) seemed particularly common, for several have been recovered from the great palaces (Heraklion Archaeological Museum).

One of the oldest examples of the concept of an animal figure holding a long flat ended conical shaped vessel in hands was known to be discovered from Susa, in Southwestern Iran, in Proto Elamite era about 3rd millennium BC, is a silver figurine of a cow with body of a sitting woman actually offering the vessel between both her bovine hoofs.

Rhytons were very common in ancient Persia, where they were called takuk (تکوک). After a Greek victory against Persia, much silver, gold, and other luxuries, including numerous rhytons, were brought to Athens. Persian rhytons were immediately imitated by Greek artists.[10] Not all rhyta were so valuable; many were simply decorated conical cups in ceramic.

Greek symbolism edit

 
Marble table support adorned by a group including Dionysos, Pan and a Satyr; Dionysos holds a rhyton (drinking vessel) in the shape of a panther; traces of red and yellow colour are preserved on the hair of the figures and the branches; from an Asia Minor workshop, 170–180 AD, National Archaeological Museum, Athens, Greece

Classical Athenian pottery, such as red-figured vases, are typically painted with themes from mythology. One standard theme depicts satyrs, which symbolize ribaldry, with rhyta and wineskins. The horn-shaped rhyta are carefully woven in composition with the erect male organs of the satyrs, but this blatantly sexual and somewhat humorous theme appears to be a late development, consistent with Athenian humor, as is expressed in the plays of Aristophanes. The ornate and precious rhyta of the great civilizations of earlier times are grandiose rather than ribald, which gives the democratic vase paintings an extra satirical dimension.

The connection of satyrs with wine and rhyta is made in Nonnus's epic Dionysiaca. He describes the satyrs at the first trampling of the grapes during the invention of wine-making by Dionysos:

...the fruit bubbled out red juice with white foam. They scooped it up with oxhorns, instead of cups which had not yet been seen, so that ever after the cup of mixed wine took this divine name of 'Winehorn'.[11]

Károly Kerényi, in quoting this passage,[12] remarks, "At the core of this richly elaborated myth, in which the poet even recalls the rhyta, it is not easy to separate the Cretan elements from those originating in Asia Minor." The connection to which he refers is a pun not present in English translation: the wine is mixed (kerannymenos), which appears to contain the bull's horn (keras), the ancient Greek name of the rhyton.

In the myth, ichor from Olympus falls among rocks. From it grow grapevines. One grows around a pine tree, where a serpent, winding up the tree, eats the grapes. Dionysus, seeing the snake, pursues it into a hole in the rocks. Following an oracle of Rhea, the Cretan mountain goddess, Dionysus hollows out the hole and tramples grapes in it, dancing and shouting. The goddess, the rocks, the snake, and the dancing are Cretan themes. The cult of Dionysus was Anatolian. At its most abstract, the rhyton is the container of the substance of life, celebrated by the ritual dancing on the grapes.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The horn in a continuous and graceful curve makes a right-angled bend. Its lower two thirds are covered by flutes with arc-shaped upper tips. A figural scene below the flaring rim represents the murder of Orpheus. The musician is the central figure, fallen to his right knee, flanked by three attacking Thracian women. He holds a six-string lyre on his right hand and with his left one, wrapped in his mantle, a knobbed wooden stick, with which he tries vainly to protect himself.
  2. ^ ῥυτόν. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  3. ^ "sreu". Indogermanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch. Bern: Francke. 1959. p. 1003.
  4. ^ Smith, William; Wayte, William; Marindin, GE, eds. (1901). "Rhyton". A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. Vol. II (3rd Revised, Enlarged ed.). London: John Murray.
  5. ^ ῥύσις in Liddell and Scott
  6. ^ κέρας in Liddell and Scott.
  7. ^ "KN 872 K(1) (102)". DĀMOS: Database of Mycenaean at Oslo. University of Oslo.
  8. ^ Ventris, Michael; Chadwick, John (1973). Documents in Mycenaean Greek (2nd ed.). Cambridge: University Press. pp. 330, 552.
  9. ^ Koehl, Robert B. "Prehistory Monographs, Volume 19: Aegean Bronze Age Rhyta". INSTAP Academic Press, 2006.
  10. ^ Bakker, Janine. "Persian influence on Greece". History of Iran. Iran chamber society. Retrieved 15 June 2012.
  11. ^ Dionysiaca XII 361-362.
  12. ^ Kerenyi, Karl (1996). Dionysos: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 58–60.
  13. ^ Rhyton. The upper section of the luxury vessel used for drinking wines is wrought from silver plate with gilded edge with embossed ivy branch. The lower part goes in the cast Protoma horse. The work of the Greek master, probably for Thracian aristocrat. Perhaps Thrace, the end of the 4th century BC. NG Prague, Kinský Palace, NM-HM10 1407.
  14. ^ Alberge, Dalya (December 7, 2021). "US billionaire surrenders $70m of stolen art". www.theguardian.com. Retrieved December 7, 2021.
  15. ^ "152. Rhyton (stag's head) - Classical". www.georgeortiz.com. Retrieved December 7, 2021.
  16. ^ Mangan, Dan; Forkin, Jim (December 6, 2021). "Hedge-fund pioneer Michael Steinhardt surrenders 180 stolen antiquities valued at $70 million, Manhattan DA Vance says". CNBC. Retrieved December 7, 2021.

External links edit

  • Jaeger, Ulf (2016). "RHYTON". Encyclopaedia Iranica.

More pictures of rhyta:

  • Achaemenid Persian Lion Rhyton
  • Minoan Bull-head Rhyton
  • Prehistoric European Rhyta
  • Tibetan Rhyton
  • Cretan-style Rhyton from Egypt
  • Attic red-figure vase, satyr holding a rhyton

rhyton, band, band, rhyton, rhytons, following, greek, plural, rhyta, roughly, conical, container, from, which, fluids, were, intended, drunk, poured, some, ceremony, such, libation, merely, table, rhyton, typically, formed, shape, animal, head, items, were, p. For the band see Rhyton band A rhyton ˈ r aɪ ˌ t ɒ n ˈ r aɪ t e n pl rhytons or following the Greek plural rhyta is a roughly conical container from which fluids were intended to be drunk or to be poured in some ceremony such as libation or merely at table A rhyton is typically formed in the shape of an animal s head Items were produced over large areas of ancient Eurasia especially from Persia to the Balkans Many have an opening at the bottom through which the liquid fell others did not and were merely used as drinking cups with the characteristic that they could not usually be set down on a surface without spilling their contents RhytonGolden rhyton from Iran s Achaemenid period excavated at Ecbatana At the National Museum of Iran MaterialCeramic metal horn stoneSizeCup size for practical use larger for ceremonial use typically in a roughly conical shape caused by a spout or a pseudo spout at the bottom WritingMay be inscribed and otherwise decoratedCreatedPrehistoric times through the presentSilver rhyton with goat protome and death of Orpheus c 420 410 BC housed in the Vassil Bojkov Collection Sofia Bulgaria The horn in a continuous and graceful curve makes a right angled bend Its lower two thirds are covered by flutes with arc shaped upper tips A figural scene below the flaring rim represents the murder of Orpheus The musician is the central figure fallen to his right knee flanked by three attacking Thracian women He holds a six string lyre on his right hand and with his left one wrapped in his mantle a knobbed wooden stick with which he tries vainly to protect himself 1 The English word rhyton originates in the ancient Greek word ῥyton rhy tonorrhŭton The conical rhyton form has been known in the Aegean region since the Bronze Age or the 2nd millennium BC However it was by no means confined to that region Similar in form to and perhaps originating from the drinking horn it has been widespread over Eurasia since prehistoric times Contents 1 Name and function 2 Wide provenance 3 Greek symbolism 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External linksName and function editLiddell and Scott 2 give a standard derivation from Greek rhein to flow which according to Julius Pokorny 3 is from Indo European sreu flow As rhutos is stream the neuter rhuton would be some sort of object associated with pouring which is equivalent to English pourer Many vessels considered rhytons featured a wide mouth at the top and a hole through a conical constriction at the bottom from which the fluid ran The idea is that one scooped wine or water from a storage vessel or similar source held it up unstoppered the hole with one s thumb and let the fluid run into the mouth or onto the ground in libation in the same way that wine is drunk from a wineskin today Smith points out 4 that this use is testified in classical paintings and accepts Athenaeus s etymology that it was named ἀpὸ tῆs ῥysews from the flowing 5 Smith also categorized the name as having been a recent form in classical times of a vessel formerly called the keras horn in the sense of a drinking horn 6 The word rhyton is not present in what is known about Mycenaean Greek the oldest form of Greek written in Linear B However the bull s head rhyton of which many examples survive is mentioned as ke ra a on tablet KN K 872 7 an inventory of vessels at Knossos it is shown with the bull ideogram 227VAS also known as rhyton Ventris and Chadwick restored the word as the adjective kera h a with a Mycenaean intervocalic h 8 nbsp A rhyton drinking vessel with animal details such vessels were widely produced in Persia during the Achaemenid Empire 550 330 BC though the lifelike animal details as seen in this one date from the later Parthian Empire 247 BC AD 224 nbsp A rhyton wine horn with lion protome Iran Parthian period 1st century BC 1st century AD silver and gilt housed in the Arthur M Sackler Gallery Rhyta shaped after bulls are filled through the large opening and emptied through the secondary smaller one This means that two hands are required one to close the secondary opening and one to fill the rhyton This has led some scholars to believe that rhytons were typically filled with the help of two people or with the help of a chain or a rope that would be passed through a handle Rhytons modeled after animals were designed to make it look like the animal was drinking when the vessel was being filled citation needed A bull rhyton weighed about three kilograms when empty and up to six kilograms when full Other rhytons with animal themes were modeled after boars lions and lionesses such as Lion head horn Some shapes such as lioness rhyta could be filled through simple submersion thanks to the vessel s shape and buoyancy Horizontally designed rhyta like those modeled after lionesses could be filled by being lowered into a fluid and supported Vertically designed rhyta like those modeled after boars required another hand to cover the primary opening and to prevent the liquid from spilling as the vessel was filled Rhyta were often used to strain liquids such as wine beer and oil Some rhyta were used in blood rituals and animal sacrifice In these cases the blood may have been thinned with wine Some vessels were modeled after the animal with which they were intended to be used during ritual but this was not always the case 9 Wide provenance edit nbsp Roman fresco from Herculaneum demonstrating the use of a rhyton c 50 BCIt cannot be proven that every drinking horn or libation vessel was pierced at the bottom especially in the prehistoric phases of the form The scoop function would have come first Once the holes began however they invited zoomorphic interpretation and plastic decoration in the forms of animal heads bovids equines cervids and even canines with the fluid pouring from the animals mouths Rhyta occur among the remains of civilizations speaking different languages and language groups in and around the Near and Middle East such as Persia from the second millennium BC They are often shaped like animals heads or horns and can be very ornate and compounded with precious metals and stones In Minoan Crete silver and gold bulls heads with round openings for the wine permitting wine to pour from the bulls mouths seemed particularly common for several have been recovered from the great palaces Heraklion Archaeological Museum One of the oldest examples of the concept of an animal figure holding a long flat ended conical shaped vessel in hands was known to be discovered from Susa in Southwestern Iran in Proto Elamite era about 3rd millennium BC is a silver figurine of a cow with body of a sitting woman actually offering the vessel between both her bovine hoofs Rhytons were very common in ancient Persia where they were called takuk تکوک After a Greek victory against Persia much silver gold and other luxuries including numerous rhytons were brought to Athens Persian rhytons were immediately imitated by Greek artists 10 Not all rhyta were so valuable many were simply decorated conical cups in ceramic Greek symbolism edit nbsp Marble table support adorned by a group including Dionysos Pan and a Satyr Dionysos holds a rhyton drinking vessel in the shape of a panther traces of red and yellow colour are preserved on the hair of the figures and the branches from an Asia Minor workshop 170 180 AD National Archaeological Museum Athens GreeceClassical Athenian pottery such as red figured vases are typically painted with themes from mythology One standard theme depicts satyrs which symbolize ribaldry with rhyta and wineskins The horn shaped rhyta are carefully woven in composition with the erect male organs of the satyrs but this blatantly sexual and somewhat humorous theme appears to be a late development consistent with Athenian humor as is expressed in the plays of Aristophanes The ornate and precious rhyta of the great civilizations of earlier times are grandiose rather than ribald which gives the democratic vase paintings an extra satirical dimension The connection of satyrs with wine and rhyta is made in Nonnus s epic Dionysiaca He describes the satyrs at the first trampling of the grapes during the invention of wine making by Dionysos the fruit bubbled out red juice with white foam They scooped it up with oxhorns instead of cups which had not yet been seen so that ever after the cup of mixed wine took this divine name of Winehorn 11 Karoly Kerenyi in quoting this passage 12 remarks At the core of this richly elaborated myth in which the poet even recalls the rhyta it is not easy to separate the Cretan elements from those originating in Asia Minor The connection to which he refers is a pun not present in English translation the wine is mixed kerannymenos which appears to contain the bull s horn keras the ancient Greek name of the rhyton In the myth ichor from Olympus falls among rocks From it grow grapevines One grows around a pine tree where a serpent winding up the tree eats the grapes Dionysus seeing the snake pursues it into a hole in the rocks Following an oracle of Rhea the Cretan mountain goddess Dionysus hollows out the hole and tramples grapes in it dancing and shouting The goddess the rocks the snake and the dancing are Cretan themes The cult of Dionysus was Anatolian At its most abstract the rhyton is the container of the substance of life celebrated by the ritual dancing on the grapes Gallery edit nbsp Urartian silver rhyton from Erebuni Fortress nbsp Achaemenid silver rhyton from Erebuni Fortress nbsp Achaemenid Persian Lion Rhyton c 500 BC nbsp Greek rhyton for the Thracian market 4th century BC nbsp Pottery griffon s head rhyton Apulia c 350 300 BC nbsp Ceramic ceremonial rhyton in the shape of a grape cluster Alisar Huyuk Anatolia Middle Bronze Age 1750 1650 BC nbsp Minoan steatite rhyta in the Heraklion Archaeological Museum nbsp Boar s head rhyton from Ugarit view from the bottom nbsp Pottery rhyton decorated with red figure satyrs cavorting c 450 BC nbsp Greek silver rhyton for the Thracian market end 4th century 13 nbsp Rhyton terminating in the forepart of a wild cat 1st century BC Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp 4th century BC Greek gold and bronze drinking horn with head of Dionysus from Tamoikin Art Fund nbsp An Ancient Greek rhyton serving vessel in the shape of a dog s head made by Brygos early 5th century BC Jerome Carcopino Museum Department of Archaeology Aleria nbsp The Stag s Head Rhyton dating to 400 BCE the largest so far known of recent examples recently surrendered and worth 3 5 million originally rediscovered in the 20th century after rampant looting in Milas Turkey 14 15 16 See also editThis article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Silver Siege Rhyton Achaemenid Persian Lion RhytonNotes edit The horn in a continuous and graceful curve makes a right angled bend Its lower two thirds are covered by flutes with arc shaped upper tips A figural scene below the flaring rim represents the murder of Orpheus The musician is the central figure fallen to his right knee flanked by three attacking Thracian women He holds a six string lyre on his right hand and with his left one wrapped in his mantle a knobbed wooden stick with which he tries vainly to protect himself ῥyton Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project sreu Indogermanisches etymologisches Worterbuch Bern Francke 1959 p 1003 Smith William Wayte William Marindin GE eds 1901 Rhyton A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities Vol II 3rd Revised Enlarged ed London John Murray ῥysis in Liddell and Scott keras in Liddell and Scott KN 872 K 1 102 DAMOS Database of Mycenaean at Oslo University of Oslo Ventris Michael Chadwick John 1973 Documents in Mycenaean Greek 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 330 552 Koehl Robert B Prehistory Monographs Volume 19 Aegean Bronze Age Rhyta INSTAP Academic Press 2006 Bakker Janine Persian influence on Greece History of Iran Iran chamber society Retrieved 15 June 2012 Dionysiaca XII 361 362 Kerenyi Karl 1996 Dionysos Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 58 60 Rhyton The upper section of the luxury vessel used for drinking wines is wrought from silver plate with gilded edge with embossed ivy branch The lower part goes in the cast Protoma horse The work of the Greek master probably for Thracian aristocrat Perhaps Thrace the end of the 4th century BC NG Prague Kinsky Palace NM HM10 1407 Alberge Dalya December 7 2021 US billionaire surrenders 70m of stolen art www theguardian com Retrieved December 7 2021 152 Rhyton stag s head Classical www georgeortiz com Retrieved December 7 2021 Mangan Dan Forkin Jim December 6 2021 Hedge fund pioneer Michael Steinhardt surrenders 180 stolen antiquities valued at 70 million Manhattan DA Vance says CNBC Retrieved December 7 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rhyta Jaeger Ulf 2016 RHYTON Encyclopaedia Iranica More pictures of rhyta Achaemenid Persian Lion Rhyton Minoan Bull head Rhyton Prehistoric European Rhyta Tibetan Rhyton Cretan style Rhyton from Egypt Attic red figure vase satyr holding a rhyton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rhyton amp oldid 1185299751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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