In the Insula VI.1 post-excavation project we have recently been looking at our miniature
ceramic vessels, and a paper on this has just been published in FOLD&R. One type we found in large numbers were the
enigmatic coperchi. Unlike the common
two-handled calici it seems very difficult to find examples of
these outside of Pompeii – and they are not common there.
Coperchi from Insula VI.1 |
Lara Anniboletti’s work on the niches and house-front
shrines is relevant here, as one of them has also produced coperchi. The associations
of the coperchi seem to suggest that
they are linked with neighbourhood cults, unlike the calice which are found in a wider variety of contexts.
Possibly this is a speculation too far, but it would be
interesting to know if other teams have unpublished examples of coperchi and, if so, in
what contexts.
2 comments:
Whoops - putting in the picture, I managed to delete an important paragraph. It said that the VI.1 coperchi were all from the Well area in primary and deliberately re-deposited contexts and that the Well area becomes the focus of a cross-roads shrine probably in the Augustan period when the well was made obsolete by the new piped water supply. The cross-roads shrine was in the charge of male magistrates. Hence the suggestion that the arrangements might have changed. Sorry!
Hi Hilary,
Of the many dozens of miniature vessels we have recovered from votive contexts in our excavations at VIII.7, I.1, and the Porta Stabia, not a single one is of the curious type you are here interested in. That may be all the more interesting as we have votive contexts associated with, or at least very near to, the large public well we uncovered in I.1.1. Let me know if you'd like more info on them and their contexts - always happy to share.
Steven Ellis
Post a Comment