-
originates from the
krasis (κράσις, lit. 'mixing') of wine and
water in
kraters.
Pottery kraters were
glazed on the
interior to make the
surface of the clay more...
- is
engraved on the vase: Astiouneios, son of Anaxagoras, from Larissa.
Kraters (mixing bowls) were
vessels used for
mixing undiluted wine with
water and...
-
forms of
kraters, not just the
Dipylon kraters. One form of
kraters was the
calyx krater; one of the
largest kraters used to
carry wine. This
krater was meant...
- The
Euphronios Krater (or
Sarpedon Krater) is an
ancient Gr****
terra cotta calyx-
krater, a bowl used for
mixing wine with water.
Created around the year...
-
Eurytios Krater (also
Eurytos Krater,
Krater of Eurytus) is the name
given to a
famous Early Corinthian column krater. The
Eurytios krater is
dated to...
-
elaborately decorated bronze volute krater, 1.64
metres (5.4 ft) in
height and
weighing 208.6
kilograms (460 lb).
Kraters were
vessels for
mixing wine and...
- and bell
kraters. The most po****r
shape is the bow-handled amphora. Many
typical Apulian vessel shapes, like
volute kraters,
column kraters, loutrophoroi...
- (disambiguation)
Crater lake (disambiguation)
Cratering (disambiguation)
Krater, a Gr****
vessel used to mix wine and
water (the
original meaning) Makhtesh...
- 13th or 12th
century BCE, has been the
subject of much discussion. It is a
krater, a
mixing bowl used for the
dilution of wine with water, a
custom which...
- The
Odysseus in the
Underworld krater is a
Lucanian calyx krater decorated in the red-figure
style dating to ca. 380 BC – ca. 360 BC. It was
found in...