Las copas tipo Cástulo en la Península Ibérica
1992; Spanish National Research Council; Volume: 49; Linguagem: Espanhol
10.3989/tp.1992.v49.i0.548
ISSN1988-3218
Autores ResumoThe Castulo cup is one of the most common black glaze Attic forms in the Iberian Peninsula from the Atlantic coast to Ampurias.Their date in the Iberian Peninsula is sorne years later than that proposed for Athens.They did not appear till sorne years after the second half of the 5th c.B.C. Their production probably continued until the first quarter of the 4th century B.C.They are almost fixed in their form for about a century, but sorne differences in the outside decoration and the underside of the foot can be pointed out.Two main types are.proposed for the second half of the 5th century and the first quarter of the 4th century B.C.The differences in date compared with those found at Athens can be explained as an adaptation of the workshops to the demands of Iberian customers.Athen's artisans continued making Castulo cups for export at a time when in Athens they did not use them any more, because the stemless cup had been replaced by the popular kantharoi and cup-kantharoi.
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