Blackware spout and handle bottle
- Title:
- Blackware spout and handle bottle
- Collection:
- Selections from the Cornell Anthropology Collections
- Donor:
- Ernst Frank
- Date:
- 750-1375 AD
- Site:
- Lambayeque, Peru (department)
- Location:
- Lambayeque, Peru (department)
- Country:
- Peru
- ID Number:
- Anthr1986_001_0095_01
- Old Catalog Number:
- 986.1.95
- File Name:
- Anthr1986_001_0095_01.jpg
- Culture:
- Sicani
Lambayeque - Style/Period:
- Lambayeque
Late Intermediate Period
Middle Horizon - Work Type:
- pottery (object genre)
bottles
molding (forming)
impressing - Materials/Techniques:
- ceramic (material)
- Subject:
- human figures (visual works)
heads
trophies (objects) - Measurement:
- 11 (centimeters, height)
- Description:
- Carinated blackware vessel, hemispherical bottom, more shallow curved top, with a flat base. Strap handle emerges horizontally from the middle of a tapering cylindrical neck/spout. Sican cultural association made by strap handle adornments. Lower figure has a tail and is typical. The bottle has a collar band of the sort common on Type I face neck bottles, but the ring is continuous & lacks the pendant tie down in the back. The impressed adornments are on the shoulder of the carinate body. The theme is difficult to make out, but may center on an anthropomorphized crab with a trophy head. The head of one of the handle adornments is missing but may have worn a crescentic headdress.
- Bibliography:
- Catalogue of the Ernst Frank Collection in the Cornell University Library
- Archival Collection:
- Precolumbian Peruvian textiles and ceramics
- Format:
- Image
- Rights:
- The images in the Collection 'Selections from the Cornell Anthropology Collections' are protected by copyright, and the copyright holders are Cornell University Library and the Department of Anthropology. Physical artifacts from the Cornell Anthropology Collections were photographed by Cornell University Library in 2012-13 for inclusion in this image collection. Cornell is providing access to the materials for research and personal use. The written permission of any copyright and other rights holders is required for distribution, reproduction, or other use that extends beyond what is authorized by fair use and other statutory exemptions. Responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with persons desiring to use the item.
Cornell would like to learn more about items in this collection and to hear from individuals or institutions that have any additional information. This collection is funded by an Arts and Sciences Grant to Frederic W. Gleach, Curator of the Anthropology Collections. Please contact him for more information about this collection, or to request permission to use these images.