“…22 combines both early and late morphological features, which make it difficult to place within the form's typological development (Gill 1984, 102–6), as known from its counterparts in Athens (Sparkes and Talcott 1970, 107–8; Elrashedy 2002, 82–5; Blondé 2007, 52–3, pl. 25) and Corinth (Pemberton 1997, 72–6; McPhee and Pemberton 2012, 179). The continuous convex profile of the deep body, and the rim that does not splay outwards, recall fifth- and early fourth-century examples.…”