AN EAST GREEK SILVER SPOON LATE CLASSICAL TO HELLENISTIC PERIOD, CIRCA 4TH CENTURY B.C. The oval bowl with flanged sides, the handle shaft in the form of a leaping lion, its forepaws joined to the rim of the bowl, the details of the mane and the musculature finely incised, the tail extended along the length of the shaft, looped in at the end and terminating in the head of a horse, the ears upright, the peaked mane incised 7 1/8 in. (18.1 cm.) long
The second is a reproduction of what they state is a Greek spoon. The bowl is rather large and would be unpractical for eating.
Ancient Greek wine strainer in the Getty Villa's Antiquities collection
Today wine is filtered before bottling. The Greeks, however, used strainers to filter out bits of grape skin and other sediment when serving wine. The form and decoration of this strainer were popular in the 300s B.C., especially in Macedonia in northern Greece. The flanged rim and projecting handles allowed the strainer to rest on the rim of a container. Both functional and decorative, the perforations in the strainer's bowl form a whirligig surrounded by concentric circles. As with the ladle, the ends of the handles terminate in ducks' heads after curving sinuously out from the their wide bases, which are engraved with palmettes.
second half of 4th century B.C.
Medium: Silver
Dimensions: 21.6 × 10.5 cm, 0.156 kg (8 1/2 × 4 1/8 in., 0.3439 lb.)
Edward Lindey
A horse is a thing of beauty... none will tire of looking at him as long as he displays himself in his splendor. Xenophon
"And the four bare walls stand on the seashore. a wreck a skeleton a monument of that instability and vicissitude to which all things human are subject. Not a dwelling within sight, and the farm labourer, and curious traveller, are the only persons that ever visit the scene where once so many thousands were congregated." T.Lewin 1867