Description:

Europe, Italy, Etruria, ca. 7th to 6th century CE. A cast bronze ceremonial ladle with a round bowl and a long handle that curves downward near its end and terminates in a duck or goose head with a broad bill. The ladle - a simpulum or simpuvium - was used to make libations and to taste wines and liquors that were poured on the heads of sacrificial victims. It was also more generally just a utensil, shown in banqueting scenes on Greek and Italian vases aiding in the distribution of wine into cups. The hooked end of the handle is shown in a scene from an Etruscan tomb being held by a slave and used to hang the utensil from the side of a large wine vessel. The style of this example - with the round bowl and the handle ending in an animal head - was common in Greece and in the Etruscan world. Comes with custom stand. Size: 2.95" W x 13.15" H (7.5 cm x 33.4 cm); height on stand: 11.5" (29.2 cm)

Provenance: private Swiss collection

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#124150

  • Condition: Beautiful mottled green and blue-green patina on surface. Intact.

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July 20, 2017 7:00 AM MDT
Louisville, CO, US

Artemis Fine Arts

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