[1009]. Cf. J.H.S. xxii. p. 66.
[1010]. x. 182.
[1011]. On the relations of Corinthian and Rhodian pottery, see Wilisch, Altkor. Thonindustrie, p. 127. The Corinthian vases found in Rhodes are roughly contemporaneous with the so-called Rhodian fabric.
[1012]. E.g. Louvre E 460, 467; Berlin 1156 ff. Furtwaengler, Dümmler, and Wilisch call these Italo-Corinthian, but Böhlau regards them as Aeolic, Orsi and Gsell as Sicilian. See Pottier, Louvre Cat. ii. p. 422.
[1013]. Gaz. Arch. 1880, p. 106.
[1014]. Wilisch, Altkor. Thonindustrie, p. 6 ff., limits these classes to three: Proto-Corinthian, Yellow-ground, and Red-ground; he arrives at this by combining Classes 2, 3, and 4 in one.
[1015]. Cf. Couve in Rev. Arch. xxxii. (1898), p. 214.
[1016]. Cf. Pliny, H.N. xxxv. 16, of Aridikes and Telephanes, spargentes linear intus. But it is not certain that this passage refers to the use of incised lines.
[1017]. Ann. dell’ Inst. 1877, pls. C, D; Mon. Antichi, i. p. 780.
[1018]. J.H.S. xi. p. 173; Gsell, Fouilles de Vulci, p. 481.