Drawing of a boat

((:naves))


Description of Drawing (English): boats
Findspot: Smyrna, Basilica (Agora.1)
Drawing Category: Boats
Writing Style: charcoal
  • Graffito Height: 104
  • Graffito Length: 89
Bibliography: Bagnall, R. S. et al., Graffiti from the Basilica in the Agora of Smyrna (2016): 268.
Commentary: Dipinto of two superimposed ships, located at the center of the back wall of Bay 27. The two vessels have similar shapes and sizes. The lower vessel seems to have been drawn after the upper one. The two ships, drawn as sailing on starboard tack, have flat keels, rounded prows, and sharply diagonal sterns. They are both medium to small vessels for transport of passengers or goods (i.e., phaseli). The upper vessel was drawn in at least two phases. In the first one the aplustre was notably longer, similar in shape to the later, and shorter, one. A faded line near this element suggests that the original sails extended to this point. A large and straight mast at the center of the bulwark, belonging to the second phase, has now almost completely disappeared, along with the lines of the cordage, mostly καλῴδια and one πρότονος, which are very faded. A large eye visible right above the bulwark of the upper ship is to be intended as decoration of the sail. In this second phase the aplustre and στόλος became identical in shape, both depicted as short inverted triangles. This first ship seems to relate to the text T27.1. The lower and later vessel’s stern is not completely preserved, while at the prow is recognizable a rounded στόλος pointing inward. No mast, yard, sails or oars are identifiable for this second ship.
Suggested Citation: AGP-SMYD00271, The Ancient Graffiti Project, <http://ancientgraffiti.org/Graffiti/graffito/AGP-SMYD00271> [accessed: 28 Mar 2024]
Contributions:

Editor: Roger S. Bagnall

Principal Contributor: Roger S. Bagnall

Last Revision: 2016-10-03