Stamnos

A stamnos (plural stamnoi; adjective stamnoid) is a type of Greek pottery used to store liquids.[1] Stamnoi had a foot, wide mouths,[2] lids and handles on their shoulders.The earliest known examples come from archaic Laconia and Etruria, and they began to be manufactured in Athens around 530 BC.[1] Media related to Stamnos at Wikimedia CommonsYou can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article relating to archaeology in Greece is a stub.
Side A from an Attic red-figure stamnos, ca. 480 BC; Louvre
LouvreGreek potteryarchaicLaconiaEtruriaAthensPottery of ancient GreeceMinyan wareMinoanKamares wareVasiliki wareMycenaeanSub-MycenaeanCycladicFrying pansBilingualBlack-figureBlack-glazed WareBuccheroRed-figureSouth ItalianWest Slope WareWhite groundAmasisErgotimosEuphroniosEuthymidesGrytonHypereidesNikosthenesPamphaiosSophilosLittle MastersErgotelesHermogenesPhrynosSoklesTlesonConservationCorpus vasorum antiquorumDisjecta membraHellenistic glassName vaseSymposiumTanagra figurineTerracotta figurinesThree-phase firingVase typesceramic artdesignarchaeology