Terracotta stemmed cup with murex decoration

Helladic, Mycenaean

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 151

The murex shells and sea anemones decorating this kylix attest to the sea as an invaluable source of food, trade, and economic prosperity for the Mycenaeans. A type of mollusk, the murex was prized in antiquity for producing a purple dye that was used in textile production and Mycenaean wall paintings. Archaeological evidence suggests that the Minoans on Crete were already manufacturing purple from murex as early as 2000 bce.

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