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Situla Handle from the Brahmapuri Hoard in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, October 2023


Title: Handle of a jug (situla)
Date: 1st century CE
Culture: Rome
Medium: Copper alloy
Dimensions: H. 5 7/8 in. (15 cm); W. 1 15/16 in. (5 cm); D. 3 1/8 in. (8 cm)
Classification: Metalwork
Credit Line: Lent by Town Hall Museum, Kolhapur
Object Number: TS.363
Rights and Reproduction: Courtesy of Kolhapur Town Hall Museum
A hoard of thirty-seven bronze and copper objects was excavated in 1945 at Brahmapuri, in Kolhapur, western India. The cosmopolitan mix of indigenous Indian objects and Roman imports suggests a merchant’s inventory of goods destined for sale in the Satavahana territories of the Deccan. The bronze Poseidon is one of many miniature copies after the lost original by the Greek sculptor Lysippos, images of which were issued on coins as early as 290 BCE. The group of locally produced miniature bronzes, including the toy cart and elephant with riders, points to an indigenous market for luxury novelties in metal. Other items in the hoard, including the spouted vessel, ring fitting, and set of auspicious symbols, suggest ritual use.
Text from: .https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/815793
Date: 1st century CE
Culture: Rome
Medium: Copper alloy
Dimensions: H. 5 7/8 in. (15 cm); W. 1 15/16 in. (5 cm); D. 3 1/8 in. (8 cm)
Classification: Metalwork
Credit Line: Lent by Town Hall Museum, Kolhapur
Object Number: TS.363
Rights and Reproduction: Courtesy of Kolhapur Town Hall Museum
A hoard of thirty-seven bronze and copper objects was excavated in 1945 at Brahmapuri, in Kolhapur, western India. The cosmopolitan mix of indigenous Indian objects and Roman imports suggests a merchant’s inventory of goods destined for sale in the Satavahana territories of the Deccan. The bronze Poseidon is one of many miniature copies after the lost original by the Greek sculptor Lysippos, images of which were issued on coins as early as 290 BCE. The group of locally produced miniature bronzes, including the toy cart and elephant with riders, points to an indigenous market for luxury novelties in metal. Other items in the hoard, including the spouted vessel, ring fitting, and set of auspicious symbols, suggest ritual use.
Text from: .https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/815793
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