Tuesday, January 4, 2011

500 Years of Wine Drinking Cups Mark Social Shifts in Ancient Greece

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Rendering of a symposium. The cups used at these gatherings reflected the social, political and economic trends of the time, just as items we commonly use reflect modern trends.


“Symposium” in Ancient Athens

These were gatherings held for nearly a millennia where communal drinking of wine was a means for cementing cultural norms and social bonds that carried over into the world of politics and business. Think of these symposia as the ancient world’s ultimate cocktail parties, with established rituals and rules.

Basic rules of Athenian symposia:

- Couches or mattresses used by reclining participants were set in a circle or square. So, there was no formal position of status or group “head.”
-Drinkers imbibed in rounds, so consumption of wine (mixed with water) was equitable. In other words, everyone got drunk at about the same rate. No teetotalers permitted.

An important aspect of any symposium was the wine cup. The cups used at these gatherings reflected the social, political and economic trends of the time, just as items we commonly use reflect modern trends. The form of and the imagery on the cups reflected the shared culture of participants, as well as the larger social realities and changes in their world during the following periods:

Iron Age (1,100-700 B.C.)
The Archaic Period (700-480 B.C.)
The Late Archaic Period (525-480 B.C.)
The High Classical Period (480-400 B.C.)
The Late Classical Period (400-323 B.C.)
The Hellenistic Period (323-31 B.C)


IRON AGE SYMPOSIA AND DRINKING CUPS (1,100-700 B.C.)


The drinking gatherings (symposia) were reserved for the elite, probably allowing political factions to consolidate power and set themselves apart from the population at large. In other words, the drinking gatherings were for the “in” crowd.

At this time, even grave markers for the very wealthy came in the form of the mixing bowls (kraters) used to blend wine with water during symposia. In other words, the ability to sponsor these drinking events was what people wanted to be remembered for.

This three-foot-high Iron Age gravemarker is in the form of a mixing vessel (water and wine) used at symposia. It signals the importance of the symposia in Athenian society. People wanted to be remembered for their ability to sponsor these gatherings.

The drinking cups during this period were simply decorated and rested directly on a base (no stem).



This three-foot-high Iron Age gravemarker is in the form of a mixing vessel (water and wine) used at symposia. It signals the importance of the symposia in Athenian society. People wanted to be remembered for their ability to sponsor these gatherings.

THE ARCHAIC PERIOD (700-480 B.C.)

After the turn of the 6th century B.C., changes in the fashion of drinking cups began, corresponding with Athens’ rising political power and rising dominance in the ceramic market. Variety and quality were high during this period. It was the beginning of black-figured pottery production as well as plain, black-glazed versions. Stemmed cups became more popular, probably because they were easier to hold while reclining.

The middle of the 6th century B.C. saw a rapid proliferation of cup types: Komast cups, Siana cups, Gordion cups, Lip cups, Band cups, Droop cups, Merry-thought cups and Cassel cups – last only a few decades in terms of popularity. Some of these remain popular for only a few decades.

Possessing what was newest in terms of mode and style of drinking cups was likely equated with knowledge and status. The elites may have been seeking cohesion and self definition in the face of factional rivalries and populist movements. This hypothesis underscores how the drinking symposia – and specific cup forms identified with specific factions – might have been used by aristocratic blocs to cement group bonds in the politically charged environment of the time.

LATE ARCHAIC PERIOD (525-480 B.C.)

The overall number of wine-drinking vessels increased dramatically during this period, pointing to the democratization of the symposium, as well as the democratization of the political and social arenas. The masses had become the political, if not the social, equals of the elites, and these masses were now enjoying symposia of their own.

It’s estimated that drinking vessels for symposia comprised up to 60 percent of the terra cotta fineware (collection of dishes) in the typical Athenian home of this period.

The typical home had few useful dishes for eating in contrast to many vessels designed for drinking wine in communal settings.

This period ends with the devastating Persian Wars, which Greece won. The proliferation of cup types fell, with red-figured drinking cups, introduced around 525 B.C., becoming the most popular.

HIGH CLASSICAL PERIOD (480-400 B.C.)

Red-figured cups (cups decorated with red figures vs. black) remain popular through the first part of this period of cultural development in Athens, but the cups grow taller and shallower.

By the end of the 5th century B.C., Athens was weathering the Peloponnesian Wars and plague, and people were searching for an escape. This came in the form of an aesthetic restlessness. Fads in drinking cups came and went, but few developed into long-lived styles.

These new cup innovations tended to emulate the fineness commonly found in silver work at the time. For instance, there were many more plain, black clay cups with shiny surfaces. And delicate stamped and incised designs in clay cup interiors imitated metal prototypes on the cheap. In other words, the common terra cotta cups were “designer knock-offs” of the “high-end” designs found on silver cups.

Think of this cup as a "designer knock off." It's made of clay but was incised and stamped to emulate silver work. It was created in a period of harsh economic and social realities when people sought escape by means of pseudo luxury goods.

Stemmed cups had finally run their course, being 200 years old at this point, and a stemless form became more popular.People may have been seeking a visual antidote to the struggles of the period and a yearning for luxury at odds with daily conditions.


LATE CLASSICAL PERIOD (400-323 B.C.)

Trends toward pseudo luxury (designer knock-offs) in drinking cups continued; however, the variety of these “silver-inspired” clay cup designs diminished after the turn of the 4th century B.C., probably because the forms were impractical. For instance, one clay cup – modeled on a silver drinking vessel – featured delicate high-swung handles that served no useful purpose in clay.

Also “running out of steam” in this period was the tradition of decorating cups with human figures. A decorative innovation, called West Slope, became popular at this time. It consisted of colored clay applied atop black-glazed surfaces to create the effects of garlands and wreaths. Human figures were no longer depicted.



Think of this cup as a "designer knock off." It's made of clay but was incised and stamped to emulate silver work. It was created in a period of harsh economic and social realities when people sought escape by means of pseudo luxury goods.


Finally, as Athens fell under the sway of Philip of Macedon and his son, Alexander the Great, the symposium came full circle. It began in the Iron Age as a practice of the elite. Then, with the movement toward democratization in Athens, participation in symposia broadened. Now, in Athens’ Hellenistic period, the practice was again the prerogative of the elites as a luxury and display of ostentatious consumption. Equality was no longer important in a state that was no longer democratic but monarchical.



Image credits:
Symposium rendering : Connolly & Dodge, “The Ancient City,” Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 52.
Symposium scene on cup (Brygos Ptr cup with decoration on exterior): Courtesy of the trustees of the British Museum, website.
Krater used as grave marker: The Metropolitan Museum of Art website: metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/14.130.14
Band Cup: Located in the Louvre Museum, image courtesy of Wikimedia commons.
Droop Cup: Located in the Louvre Museum, image courtesy of Wikimedia commons.
Lip Cup: Courtesy of the trustees of the British Museum, website.
Siana Cup: Courtesy of the trustees of the British Museum, website.
Kylix Cup: Courtesy of the excavations of the Athenian Agora.
Set of Iron Age vessels: Courtesy of the excavations of the Athenian Agora.
Set of Kantharoi cups 1: Courtesy of the excavations of the Athenian Agora.
Set of Kantharoi cups 2: Courtesy of the excavations of the Athenian Agora.
Stemless Stamped Cup: Courtesy of the excavations of the Athenian Agora.
Set of three stemless cups: Courtesy of the excavations of the Athenian Agora.
Third Stemless Cup: Courtesy of the excavations of the Athenian Agora.

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