January 2025 (129.1)

Archaeological Note

The Trojan Ketos on the Hesione Vase: Iconography, Paleogeography, and Osteology

By Stephen Croft

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This archaeological note proposes that the animal skull appearing on the Hesione Vase (Museum of Fine Arts Boston 63.420) and often identified as a Miocene giraffid belongs to an equid. The imagery of the sixth-century BCE vase is examined in relation to the iconographic tradition of the Lernaean Hydra and the ketos (sea monster). The paleogeography of the Corinthia and comparative osteology of the skull are considered. The possibility is raised that the skull belongs to a Plio-Pleistocene hipparionine equid, discovered in the Corinthia during clay collection in antiquity.

Column krater depicting Herakles, Hesione, and the Trojan Ketos, ca. 575–550 BCE, from Caere. Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 63.420, acq. 1963 (© 2024 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston).

Column krater depicting Herakles, Hesione, and the Trojan Ketos, ca. 575–550 BCE, from Caere. Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 63.420, acq. 1963 (© 2024 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston).

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PotteryIconographyArchaic PeriodVase PaintingGreece
Column krater depicting Herakles, Hesione, and the Trojan Ketos, ca. 575–550 BCE, from Caere. Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 63.420, acq. 1963 (© 2024 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston).

Column krater depicting Herakles, Hesione, and the Trojan Ketos, ca. 575–550 BCE, from Caere. Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 63.420, acq. 1963 (© 2024 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston).