Carthaginian pottery garum amphora
R38£400.00
Available
A pottery amphora vessel with a wide mouth, bulbous body and long pointed base, the shoulder mounted with two handles. This type of small amphora has been found at numerous sites across the Mediterranean and was used to transport and store garum, a popular sauce made from fermented fish.
Culture
Carthage, Punic, 4th or 3rd Century BC
Size
20.3 x 10.6 cms, supplied with a metal tripod display stand
Condition
Intact as shown
Provenance
Ex. collection: Frederick William Robins FSA FRGS, Oxford, UK (deceased c. 1962); thence by family inheritance to present. Ink reference number P.2.04 inscribed on shoulder.
FW Robins collected antiquities in the first half of the 20th Century and published several books including The Story of the Lamp (Oxford University Press, 1939) documenting the development of the oil lamp using over 800 items from his own collection.
Robins was very active in the academic and museum life of Oxford during the 1930’s, mixing with legendary archaeologists such as Sir Arthur Evans and Henry Balfour, and received acknowledgment from the Pitt-Rivers Museum in their annual report 1940-1941 for his voluntary work. The British Museum and the Pitt-Rivers Museum both hold antiquities from the FW Robins bequest, some of which were published by DM Bailey in 1963.