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Roman Sacrificial
Vases
Description of the Roman Sacrificial Vases lately
discovered in Sewell's-lane, Scotch Street, Carlisle.
These antiquities are so valuable, both from their rarity,
and from the elegance of the workmanship, that they must be
extremely precious in the eyes of the Antiquary. The name
that the vase is generally distinguished by is
praefericulum, and it is understood to have been
appropriated to the holding of incense, &c. used in the
sacrifice. Many of these have been brought from Greece and
Siciliy, and have been highly estimated by the curious, for
the elegance of the workmanship, and the beauty of the
relief in the ornaments. But the Grecian vessels are
principally of fine clay, or bronze. These vases we are
speaking of, we believe, are the first which have been
discovered in Britain; and the sculpture of such a vessel
but once appears among all the altars found in this country:
it is on a beautiful Roman altar, discovered at
Ellenborough, which was removed to Flat-hall, at Whitehaven,
and is now in the possession of Lord Viscount Lowther. This
altar is inscribed "Genio loci, Fortunae reduci, Romae
AEternae, et Fato bono," &c. It is said to be the
most curious Roman altar that ever was discovered in
Britain, and is particularly described both by Camden and
Horsley, who go into a long train of conjectures respecting
the instruments sculptured on its side, which are the
praefericulum, the patera, the axe, and the
knife.
- The metal which the vessels in question are formed of
seems to be a composition of refined brass, capable of
receiving a very high polish, and so flexible that it
allowed the artificer to form them extremely thin. At the
top and bottom of the vases it is evident that they have
been turned and finished in a lathe. From there being no
accompanying altar or inscription, we regret we cannot
suppose exactly the time of the Empire when these sacred
vessels have been used. The only guide is the elegant
sculpture of the handles, which consists of four tiers of
groups of figures, in excellent workmanship, and all
apparently illustrative of sacrifice. The uppermost seems to
be two persons holding, or preparing, a cow or bullock for
sacrifice; the next, a person taking hold of a hog for the
same purpose; the third, a priest cloathed in his robes,
standing at an altar, holding something on it; the lower
one, which is the most beautiful, is, on the one side, a man
cloathed in complete armour, holding a knife, as if going to
sacrifice a sheep or a lamb, which another person below
holds for that purpose; on the other side the priest stands,
with another knife or sword, attending the ceremony. These
vases are, from their extreme rarity, and from other cause,
unquestionably of much greater value than we were first
induced to set upon them.
This piece of antiquity has been preserved, because it fell
into the hands of a judicious mechanic; but we have heard it
asserted as a fact, that some remains of antiquity, found in
this neighbourhood, was a few years ago carries to a
founder, who consigned it to the furnace, because no one
present understood that such a thing was of the smallest
value!
Carlisle Journal
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