TY - JOUR
T1 - Old cups die hard
T2 - The appropriation of Athenian pottery in the Iberian peninsula
AU - Rodríguez Pérez, Diana
N1 - Funding Information:
This article is part of a larger research programme on the consumption of Athenian pottery in the Iberian peninsula carried out at Wolfson College, Oxford, thanks to the financial support of a Mougins Museum in Classical Art and Material Culture Junior Research Fellowship (2016-2019). Part of the research was conducted in the John Miller Burnam Library of the Department of Classics of the University of Cincinnati during a Tytus summer residency in 2017, for which I am most grateful. The article has benefitted from the feedback of the following scholars (in alphabetical order): †Paloma Cabrera Bonet, Adolfo Domínguez Monedero, Raimon Graells i Fabregat, Søren Handberg, Carmen Sánchez Fernández, Vivi Saripanidi, Mark Stansbury O'Donnell and Ann Steiner. I would like to thank the following people for granting me access to material, publications and/or photographs: Esperanza Manso Martín (MAN), Carmen Rueda Galán (UJA), Jorge García Cardiel (UAM), Enric Verdú Parra (MARQ), Arturo Oliver Foix (Diputación de Castellón), José Manuel Melchor Monserrat (Museo de Burriana), Amanda Reiterman (UCSC), Stéphane Verger (EPHE), Andrés Adroher Aroux (UGR), Marta Santos Retolaza, Pere Castanyer i Masoliver and Elisa Hernández Pastor (Ampurias) and Gabriel de Prados and Ferrán Codina (Ullastret). I would also like to thank Kathleen Lynch, for her generous support during my stay in Cincinnati, as well as Tom Carpenter, with whom I discussed some aspects of my research. Peter Stewart, Carmen Sánchez and Thomas Mannack have helped me in countless ways throughout these years. I would also like to thank the anonymous reviewers of JHS for their pertinent and relevant suggestions, which helped me to improve the manuscript, as well as Douglas Cairns and Lin Foxhall for their work on my manuscript. All errors and shortcomings remain my responsibility.
PY - 2021/11/1
Y1 - 2021/11/1
N2 - The Iberian archaeological record is particularly rich in asynchronous (i.e. chronologically mixed) assemblages including Athenian pots that predate the other items by a couple of decades or even a few centuries. Recent scholarship on keimëlia, or 'curated objects' in modern parlance, has shown the potential of such objects to investigate questions of identity, agency and history-making among the receiving communities, but also to shed light on the role of Athenian pottery among them. This article analyses this phenomenon within the Iberian peninsula, focusing on drinking cups, both black-gloss with inset lip (Cástulo cups) and red-figure type B cups. Using case studies from necropoleis and settlements of the southeast and east of the peninsula, the article explores the reasons and meaning of this consumption practice. It is argued that the occurrence of 'heirloom' vases in Iberian tombs and their extraordinary survival in some settlements is the result of a conscious and deliberate choice indicating the existence of mechanisms of social distinction based on a diacritical use of material culture. It is further argued that different motivations might lie behind their delayed deposition: when the chronological gap between production and disposal dates is small, one or two human generations, curated Athenian vases worked similarly to non-curated ones, being emblematic of economic success, social affiliations and political rank. But when the interval is longer, Athenian pots became symbols of ancestry and elite status, possibly acquiring the same legitimizing role earlier bestowed upon Orientalizing artefacts. Supplementary material is available online (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0075426921000094) and comprises a catalogue of case-study objects.
AB - The Iberian archaeological record is particularly rich in asynchronous (i.e. chronologically mixed) assemblages including Athenian pots that predate the other items by a couple of decades or even a few centuries. Recent scholarship on keimëlia, or 'curated objects' in modern parlance, has shown the potential of such objects to investigate questions of identity, agency and history-making among the receiving communities, but also to shed light on the role of Athenian pottery among them. This article analyses this phenomenon within the Iberian peninsula, focusing on drinking cups, both black-gloss with inset lip (Cástulo cups) and red-figure type B cups. Using case studies from necropoleis and settlements of the southeast and east of the peninsula, the article explores the reasons and meaning of this consumption practice. It is argued that the occurrence of 'heirloom' vases in Iberian tombs and their extraordinary survival in some settlements is the result of a conscious and deliberate choice indicating the existence of mechanisms of social distinction based on a diacritical use of material culture. It is further argued that different motivations might lie behind their delayed deposition: when the chronological gap between production and disposal dates is small, one or two human generations, curated Athenian vases worked similarly to non-curated ones, being emblematic of economic success, social affiliations and political rank. But when the interval is longer, Athenian pots became symbols of ancestry and elite status, possibly acquiring the same legitimizing role earlier bestowed upon Orientalizing artefacts. Supplementary material is available online (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0075426921000094) and comprises a catalogue of case-study objects.
KW - Athenian pottery
KW - bell-krater
KW - cups
KW - heirlooms
KW - Iberian peninsula
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85115178980&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S0075426921000094
DO - 10.1017/S0075426921000094
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85115178980
SN - 0075-4269
VL - 141
SP - 74
EP - 109
JO - Journal of Hellenic Studies
JF - Journal of Hellenic Studies
ER -