Bronze oinochoe, Greek, mid 6th Century BCE
From the Met Museum

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Bronze oinochoe, Greek, mid 6th Century BCE
From the Met Museum
Odysseus listens to the song of the Sirens. Attic black-figure oenochoe, artist unknown; ca. 525-500 BCE. Now in the Altes Museum, Berlin. Photo credit: Carole Raddato.
Oenochoe
Place: Ancient Greece, Corinth
Date: Circa 570- 550 BC
Material: yellowish clay, brown lacquer, purple paint
The State Hermitage Museum
Oenochoe
Place: Ancient Greece, Corinth
Date: Second quarter- middle of the 7th century BC (?)
Material: yellowish-pinkish clay, lacquer, purple paint
The State Hermitage Museum
Oenochoe (Bichrome V Ware), 600–475 B.C./ Cypro-Archaic II / Cypriote
Threefoil oenochoe https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oenochoe , white-ground, showing a satyr https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satyr with a lyre https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyre from the 5th century BCE from the collection of the archaeological museum of Isthmia
ROMAN GLASS JUG - 1st Century A.D.
This jug is the earliest form of a imitation of well known bronze oenochoë, it has a simple concave base; the bifurcated handle is a characteristic for a production in the end of the first to first part of the second century. The unworked rim is a characteristic for a production in Italy. The earliest specimen comes from a pre-Flavian grave at Este. The same form is known from Pompeii.