A carchesium from c. 170250 held by the Gallo-Roman Museum in Tongeren, Belgium
A glass carchesium (3rd cent.) held by the Picardy Museum in Amiens, France.

A carchesium (Latin), carchesion, or karkhesion (Greek: καρχήσιον, karkhḗsion) was a kind of drinkware of the ancient Greeks and Romans. It is variously glossed as a cup,[1] beaker,[1] or goblet.[2]

Carchesia seem to have had several different forms[3] but were generally somewhat elongated and narrower in the middle than at the top or bottom.[4] They were used for wine in ancient Greece[5] and Rome,[6] as well as milk.[7] They sometimes bore narrow handles.[8] Carchasia were notably used in ritual libation, with Vergil having Aeneas pour out 2 of pure wine, 2 of fresh milk, and 2 of sacred blood over the tomb of his father Anchises.[9] It was also used for pouring out offerings of honey.[1] In late Antiquity, Sidonius associated the vessel with the Chaldeans of Babylonia.[10]

The cup gave its name to the version of a crow's nest used on Greek and Roman ships and to the crane mechanism that could be operated from it.[2] It was glossed in Old English as bune,[11] which appeared repeatedly in the dragon's hoard in Beowulf, probably to denote its antiquity and exoticness to listeners.[12] A large carchesium was given by King Charles the Simple of France to the Abbey of Saint Denis in the early 10th century.[13]

References

Citations

Bibliography

  • Frank, Roberta (2005), "Three 'Cups' and a Funeral in Beowulf", Latin Learning and English Lore..., vol. I, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 407–420.
  • Rich, Anthony (1849), "Carchesium", The Illustrated Companion to the Latin Dictionary and Greek Lexicon..., London: Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans, pp. 119–120.
  • Whitehouse, David (1997), "130. Cup with Two Handles", Roman Glass in the Corning Museum of Glass, vol. I, New York: Hudson Hills Press, pp. 90–91.
  • Yates, James (1842), "Carchesium", A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, London: Taylor & Walton, pp. 197–198.
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