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                <text>Late Antiquity, Seminar 2</text>
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              <text>Silver Ewer</text>
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              <text>Silver Ewer, 4th century, Early Byzantine, Antioch, silver, height: 20 cm, Washington D.C., Dumbarton Oaks.</text>
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              <text>Museum Desciprtion: “This silver ewer reflects the good life that could be found in a household in Daphne, the wealthy suburb of the great commercial city of Antioch. In one of the villas, the ewer was discovered purposely buried together with three other silver objects: a plate, a bowl, and a statuette of Aphrodite—the latter perhaps a guardian of the household (cf. Ross, 1953; Mango, 1986). Probably associated with the bowl, the ewer presumably formed a set such as those known as parts of the dinner service in well-to-do Roman households: servants would pour water from a ewer over the hands of diners and catch it in a bowl before eating. Although this ewer is not decorated, its bulbous body, long neck, and sharply angled handle place it in the fourth century. The cache of objects was excavated in the House of Menander, an extensive urban villa whose name derives from a representation of the famous Hellenistic Greek playwright on a floor mosaic. The mosaic with Fishing Erotes at Dumbarton Oaks (BZ.1940.64) also comes from this villa.”&#13;
&#13;
-S. Zwirn</text>
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              <text>http://museum.doaks.org/objects-1/info/27018 </text>
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