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Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1746, described as Black bucchero-pitcher . Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 26.5 cm; diameter: 17 cm (see Matteucig's plate XIV, 2). Light bucchero. Oinochoe with high round neck, flaring lip, ovoid body, strap handle, and low solid foot. On shoulder, nine very fine incised lines; eight lines on the middle; six above foot. About half the vase is restored in dark clay.  Cf. Not. Sc., 1928, p. 101, fig. 12 from Veii; C.W.A., Denmark, fasc. IV, pl. 212, 4; C.W.A., Scheurleer, fasc. 1, IV, B, b, pl. 1, 6.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1879, described as Smaller bucchero pitcher, same as 8-1878. Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 15.8 cm; height to top of handle: 17.8 cm; diameter: 11.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XX,17). Heavy bucchero. Trefoil mouth; two reeded handles; fillet at base of neck; round body on low, broad foot. Three deep incised lines on body. Lip and foot slightly chipped.  Cf. Not. Sc., 1914, p. 91, fig. 4, m, from Pitigliano; St. Etr., IX, 1935, Pl. XLVI, 24; C.W.A., Denmark, fasc. V, pl. 212, no; 2; Peabody Museum, Cambridge, Mass., no. 64.83o from Pitigliano.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1877, described as Injured bucchero pitcher, naked man ear. Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 30.5 cm; diameter: 17.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XX, 9). Heavy bucchero. Shape similar tonos. 1875 and 1876. On rotelle, an incised rosette with central disk in relief; on strap handle, a supine naked man; on middle of neck, two relief bands; fillet at base; on shoulder, godroons; below godroons, two re lief bands; under bands, an incised zigzag; on body five animals, (lions?) walking right, divided by a floral motive (lotus and palmettes) in relief; incised details; below ani mal zone, an incised zigzag band between two incised parallels. About two-thirds of the mouth and neck missing; on body, fillings in gray cement.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1741, described as Corinthian trefoil oinochoe (pitcher). Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 25.8 cm; height, to top of handle: 29.3 cm; diameter: 20.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XIII, 17). Italo-Corinthian. Clay light buff, well purified; cream slip; dark brown and violet paint. Oinochoe with trefoil mouth, low neck, and squat body as in Robinson, Toronto Vases, Pl. XV, 207. Decoration as in Albizzati, fasc. II, Pl. XVI, 155. Decoration very faint; paint peeling off.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1860, described as Etrusco-Corinthian trefoil pitcher (or olpe). Attributed to the Rosoni Painter. Description from Matteucig (1951): Olpe; height: 32 cm; diameter: 14.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XIX, 18). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pinkish cream; cream slip; dark-brown and violet paint. Round mouth; high neck; two-reeded handle with rotelle; fillet at base of neck; pyriform body on low flat foot. On rotelle, an incised line rosette; for about 5.5 cm in side mouth, brown paint; neck and outer part of handle, solid brown; four animal triezes: (1) two geese going right; in front of each, a nine-petal rosette; (2) two panthers going right; body in profile, heads full face; rosettes and dots; (3) in the center, a big thirteen-petal rosette: two ducks facing it; to the right a panther (?), and a ten-petal rosette; to the left another rosette faced by a duck; (4) ducks, alternating with rosettes. At bottom, four groups of tongue patterns; six tongues in every group. Vase restored from several fragments; good deal of modern filling in cream clay. Animal friezes and fill ing ornaments very poorly preserved.  Cf. Montelius, pl. 209, no. 20from Pitigliano, and pl. 211, no. 14, from Poggio Buco; Not. Sc., 1898, p. 442, fig. 7, from Poggio Buco; St. Etr., IX, 1935, Pl. V, 4, 5, from Heba; Albizzati, Pl. XIII, 130; Beazley-Magi, p. 74, nos. 84,85; Rosone style.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1780, described as Yellow trefoil pitcher. Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 25.5 cm; diameter: 19.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate  XVI, 1). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pale buff, well purified; light cream slip. Trefoil mouth; low neck; globular body on low solid foot; strap handle. No decoration; restored from three fragments.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1786, described as Etrusco-Corinthian oinochoe (pitcher), pink painted red, similar to 8-1785. Attributed to the Vulci Painter. Description from Matteucig (1951): Olpe; height: 33.5 cm; diameter: 16.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XVI, 8). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pale buff; cream slip; brown-red paint. Round mouth with flaring lip; high neck with fillet at base; pyriform body on low solid foot; strap handle and rotelle. Entire vase, including about 4 cm inside mouth, except for the part under the handle and the reserved space between rays at the bottom, is painted brown red. On râtelle, a cross in cream paint; on neck, three dot rosettes; dots on fillet; on shoulder, just below fillet, incised tongue patterns; every fourth tongue has a cream stripe; the two end tongues, about 4 cm from the handle, are decorated with a vertical incised zigzag; on either side of handle, a cream painted scroll; tongue pattern between two cream bands. On the middle, between two other cream bands, four incised lotus palmettes with alternate petals filled by cream blots. Below this, a band of incised double semicircles, interlaced, with intervening spaces filled by cream dots; rising from the foot, a ray pattern. Paint badly faded or peeled off.  Cf. Albizzati, PI. XVI, 179; Sieveking-Hackl, PI. XXVII, 634, 635 a; Langlotz, PL CCXXV, 777, a, b, c, d,; C.V.A., Copenhagen, fase. 2, pi. 95, no. 11; four exact parallels in the Museo Archeologico, Florence
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1874, described as Corinthian shape pitcher. Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 29.5 cm; height to top of handle: 34 cm; diameter: 20.3 cm (see Matteucig's plate XX, 8). Italo-Corinthian. Clay light cream almost white. Shape and decoration like that of the vase in the University Museum, Philadelphia, reproduced in St. Etr., X, 1936, Pl. II, 4. About one-third of mouth chipped off; body restored from several fragments with much filling in gray cement.  Another exact replica from Poggio Buco in the Museo Archeologico, Florence.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1744, described as Buff winepitcher. Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 20.7 cm; diameter: 10.2 cm (see Matteucig's plate XIII, 19). Italo-Geometric. Clay reddish cream; buff slip; matt brown paint. Shape and decoration as in Albizzati, Pl. III, 31. Decoration badly faded.  Cf. Montelius, pl. 259, 15 from Vulci; Gsell, Pl. I, fig. 8; Sieveking-Hackl, Pl. XXV, 602.
Hearst Museum object titled Pitcher, accession number 8-1878, described as Black bucchero pitcher, engraved. Description from Matteucig (1951): Oinochoe; height: 18 cm; height to top of handle: 21.5 cm; diameter: 16 cm (see Matteucig's plate XX, 16). Heavy bucchero. Oinochoe with trefoil mouth; round neck; two reeded handles; squat spherical body on low, broad, hollow foot. Three fine incised lines on body.  Cf. Montelius, pl. 241, no. 2, from Orvieto; J.d.I., XV, 1900, p. 182, fig. 23, no. 2, from Poggio Buco.