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Start Over You searched for: Object name Goblet Remove constraint Object name: Goblet Collection place Poggio Buco, Tuscany, Central Italy Remove constraint Collection place: Poggio Buco, Tuscany, Central Italy Culture or time period Italic people Remove constraint Culture or time period: Italic people

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Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1661, described as Red goblet, tall foot. Description from Matteucig (1951): Krater on high stem: height; 20.5 cm; diameter: 19.8 cm (see Matteucig's plate VIII, 3). Italo-Geometric. Clay and paint as in no. 8-1574; shape and decoration likewise, except that instead of the metopal arrangement on the shoulder, there is a continuous band of hatched rhomboids set point to point. Bowl restored from several pieces; stem restored from two pieces.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1902, described as Low foot bucchero goblet, as before. Description from Matteucig (1951): Cup; height: 7.5 cm; diameter: 13.2 cm (see Matteucig's plate XXI, 20). Six light buc chero cups, similar in shape and decoration to nos. 8-1748-1750, 8-1809-1810. Heavy lime and mud deposits on all six specimens.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1782, described as Goblet, small one, flat hawkbill rim. Description from Matteucig (1951): Goblet; height: 6.2 cm; diameter: 9.3 cm (see Matteucig's plate XVI, 3). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pale buff; light reddish-cream slip; dark brown paint. Shallow bowl with broad lip, low hollow stem, and broad foot. Dark brown band on lip; one band below. Stem and foot solid dark brown; inside, brown. Brush marks visible.  Cf. Not. Sc., 1907, p. 342, fig. 71 from Tarquinia; Albizzati, Pl. XXV, 248; C.W.A., Denmark, fasc. V, pl. 217, no. 2.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1547, described as Small bucchero goblet. Description from Matteucig (1951): Goblet; height: 9.8 cm; diameter: 8.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate IV, 10). Gray bucchero. Clay light gray; dark gray polished surface. Flat, protruding lip; hemispherical bowl with a crude attempt at godroon decoration, really a series of irregular, vertical grooves produced with a stick; high hollow stem with three triangular perforations. Bowl restored from nine pieces; badly cracked.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1653, described as Polished red goblet. Description from Matteucig (1951): i). Cup (8/1653); height: 9 cm; diameter:  13.3 cm (see Matteucig's plate VIII, 5). Like no. 8-1652.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1657, described as Gray, clumsy goblet
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1544, described as Another, same as 8-1542, faded. Description from Matteucig (1951): Goblet; height: 7.7 cm; diameter: 10.2 cm (see Matteucig's plate IV, 7). Gray bucchero. Cf. nos. 1542– 1543.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1870, described as Red goblet coated white same type. Description from Matteucig (1951): Goblet; height: 5.9 cm; diameter: 9.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XX, 4). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pale buff; reddish-cream slip. Shape and incisions as in no. 8-1869.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1543, described as Goblet w. lead [four triangle shapes]. Description from Matteucig (1951): Goblet; height: 8.3 cm; diameter: 10.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate IV, 6). Gray bucchero. Clay, shape, and decoration as in 1542.
Hearst Museum object titled Goblet, accession number 8-1893, described as Tall foot bucchero goblet, wave rim. Description from Matteucig (1951): Chalice; height: 16.2 cm; diameter: 14.2 cm (see Matteucig's plate XXI, 10). Heavy bucchero. Chalice with fluted sides on shallow rounded bottom; high stem with spreading foot. Fillet dividing sides from bottom; another fillet on top of stem, and one on bottom, just above foot. Surface badly scratched.  Cf. St. Etr., IX, 1935, Pl. XLV, 7; C.W.A., Sèvres, fasc. 1, pl. 28, no. 10, from Chiusi or Volterra.