Pithos (plural pithoi) originally referred in ancient Greek (πίθος, πίθοι) to a large storage jar of a characteristic shape. The word was at one point used by western classical archaeologists to mean the jars uncovered by excavation in Crete and Greece. It has now been adopted by the American English language as a general word for a storage jar from any culture.[1]
Contents |
Although the word is Greek, many of the pithoi of the ancient Mediterranean were not produced on the Greek mainland; for example, they are known from Crete and the Levant in non-Hellenic contexts. Many pithoi were excavated in the Palace of Knossos and the ancient shipwreck of Uluburun. The Ancient Iberian culture of El Argar also used pithoi for burials in its B phase (1500-1300 BC).
The pithos is better known in its Latin form as the fiscus, sometimes taken as meaning a place where funds were stored.[2] Anything could be placed in a pithos; however, they were used primarily for grains, seeds, wine, and oil. They were commonly associated with administrative and trade centers, which shipped, kept, or received large quantities.
Pithoi were almost universally ceramic, which repelled water, dirt, insects, and rodents. Most were as tall as or taller than a human. The bases were flat so that they could be placed in rows in a storage magazine or lined up along a hallway, walkway, or staircase. Lugs or, more rarely the more breakable handles, were located on the upper sides for ease in handling. Some pithoi were set into holes in the floor.
Pithoi were often handled with ropes. Some vases display raised decorative ropes. Those with pointed rather than flat bases and narrow, sealable mouths were made specifically for shipping: a pithos, however broad-based, had no chance of remaining upright in an ancient ship; therefore pithoi with pointed ends were packed together as tightly as possible, and secured with ropes around their necks for the duration of the sea voyage.[citation needed]
A pithos for storage could be turned to the advantage of an enemy, who had only to knock over a pithos full of oil and touch a torch to it to produce a major conflagration. Most of the palaces of the Bronze Age Aegean were burned at one time or another in this way.
The extensive surface area of a pithos was a common field for decoration. For example, pithoi recovered at Knossos exhibit simulated rope designs.[3] The best decor was reserved for table and service ware, but most pithoi have some kind of pattern or scene, most often raised and arrayed in bands around the jar.
Like the ceramic bathtubs of some periods, the size of a pithos made it a convenient coffin, especially where wood was in short supply. There is evidence of Middle Helladic burials in Mycenae and Crete where the bones of the interred have been placed in pithoi.
In ancient Greek Mythology the fabled 'Pandora's Box' was in fact a Pithos, but was mistakenly translated to the form we are familiar with today.
Pithos is the name of a Linux desktop client for the Pandora radio service.[4] Its name is derived from the fact that the fabled 'Pandora's box' was not a box at all, but a clay pithos.
![]() |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Pithoi |
|
Pandora's Pithos
Thinking about what to do
Thinking about what to say
Silence is killing our weak and repulsive youth
Can't you see what I mean?
Self-deception holds you down
Crush the illusions and make your demand
Time to act and time to be
Nothing will come out of nothing my friend.
Afraid of the struggle and the pain
Seems easier to sit down and wait
Ignorance is killing our weak and repulsive youth
Can't you see what I mean?
There is no time to waste
You got to keep the faith
Stand up, grow up.
What will you do when the end is near?
Sneer at the people who opened your eyes?
Ignorance is killing our weak and repulsive race
Can't you hear what I say?
Something is holding you down
What can it be? Can't you see?
Dishonesty is killing our wild and rejecting youth