Page:History of Art in Primitive Greece - Mycenian Art Vol 2.djvu/549

 492 Indkx. B. Baije, carried by goddess, ii. i8o. Babin, his mission at Troy, i. 253 ; sketch, ii. 60//. Bali Dagh, not the site of Troy, i. 225- 240. Band, decorative, on wall and pottery, i. 5^2. Barnacles, superstitions relating to, ii. 393-. Bas-relief, easier than sculpture in the round, ii. 173, 174. Bath-room, at Tiryns, i. 285, 286. Belger (C), his study on the domed- graves, i. 359 ; relating to the identi- fication of the shaft-graves excavated by Schliemann, i. 373//. ; refutes error uix)n the so-called grave of Hesiod, i. 422;/. ; his restoration of the royal cemetery at Mycenae, ii. 20;/. Benndorf (Otto), his researches on sepulchral masks, ii. 240. Bent, researches among the Cyclades, i. 450. Berthelot, on the copjxir age, ii. 422//. Bezels, engraved, ii. 291, 292. Biliotti, excavations at lalysos, i. 445. Bird, clumsy representation of, at Spata, ii. 402. Blavette, drawing of Mycenae daggers, ii. 223//. Boetticher (E.), theory relating to Troy, i. 245-254. Bohn (R.), excavations at Menidi, i. 399- Bone, idol, ii. 178; tools, ii. 419. Breasts, goddess pressing, ii. 180-183. Brick, unbaked at Troy, i. 179, 180, 190, 198; Tiryns, i. 287, 288 ; the part it plays in the construction, i. 475, 476. Bronze, at Troy, i. 203 ; ii. 268 ; in the islands, ii. 450 ; at Mycenae, i. 45 1 ; ii. 455 ; in the construction, i. 460 ; alloyed with tin, ii. 451. Bruckner, on Trojan pottery, i. 213//. Bucrania, on gem, ii. 294 ; on vase, ii. 438, 439. Bull, wild, on Vaphio goblets, ii. 227, 231 ; on gems, ii, 299. Burin, use of, for finishing hammered- up figures, ii. 233. Bursian, ii. 95«., 116//. Butterfly, on gold ornament, ii. 444. Buttons, glass, ii. 416; gold, ii. 417, 446. C. Cabiri, i. 74. Cadmus, i. 78. Calf-head, carved on handle, ii. 407. Camiros, glass-pastes wrongly attributed to, i. 445//. ; ii. 416;/. Canopi, Trojan vases in the shape of, ii. 426. Capital of semi-column in Tomb I., ii. 67, 68. Carians, i. 6^. Casting, jets, under feet of figures, ii. 198, 199. Cat, on gold ornament, ii. 281. Causeways, Cyclopaean, at Mycenae, i. 340 ; on the acropolis at Athens, i. 412, 413- Cavity, relieving, above lintels, ii. 35. Ceilings, jxiinted, i. 528. Cenchreae, pyramid of, i. 389. Chariot, war-, ii. 209-213, 299. Chatzidaki, services of, relating to Cretan antiquities, i. 436//. Chevron, on column, i. 501 ; on stelie and vases, i. 525, 526; ii. 358. Chimaera, presumable origin of, ii. 313. Choisy, Ettides sur T architecture grecque^ ii. 168//. XpvJoiyXoc, ii< 226. Clay, its manifold uses at Troy, i. 203, 204 ; mortar of, i. 461. Clay cones, at Troy, i. 206. Cnosus, i. 439-443. Coatings, at Thera, i. 152; Tiryns, i. 286 ; Mycenae, i. 337 ; necessity and comix)sition of plaster facing, i. 461, 464, 493. Coffers, origin of, in wood ceiling, ii. 166. Colours, employed by the painter, i. ^53j S^^j 5^9 5 ^y ^'^ ceramist at Thera, i. 153 ; Tiryns, ii. 366. Column, non-existent at Troy, i. 490 ; represented by semi-columns and bases at Mycenae and Tiryns, i. 490, 49 1 ; its peculiar outline, i. 493-495 j thinness, i. 496 ; capital, i. 496, 497 ; base, i. 498, 499 ; flutes, i. 499, 500 ; facings on, i. 492, 502 ; as ornament along inner walls, i. 490 ; Mycenian order, i. 502 ; Mycenian and Doric column compared, ii. 167 ; repre- sentation of palace over the Lions Gate, ii. 246. Combats, representations of, ii. 217, 218, 293, 302, 303.