[1220]. See Arch. Zeit. 1885, p. 189·

[1221]. Most of his vases are illustrated in the Wiener Vorlegeblätter for 1890–91.

[1222]. See Loeschcke in Arch. Zeit. 1881, p. 35. He may have imitated Etruscan bronze jugs, which were now being imported. The Berlin vase (Fig. [136], Chapter XV.) seems to be an imitation of the early Cyprio-Phoenician metal bowls (ibid.).

[1223]. E.g. B.M. B 364.

[1224]. Loeschcke (Arch. Zeit. 1881, p. 36) has pointed out that these are the most archaic examples of the Attic white-ground vases.

[1225]. Fig. 2 on Plate [XXXV]. is also his work.

[1226]. Perhaps the nearest analogy is the “counterchanging” of heraldry.

[1227]. Burlington Fine Arts Club Cat. 1888, No. 108; 1903, No. 21, p. 102.

[1228]. See on the curious technique of this design Ath. Mitth. 1879, p. 290, note 4.

[1229]. Jahrbuch, 1889, pl. 4.