Socializing at the Symposium

Alcohol Through the Ages November/December 2020

Greece
(Angelafoto/Getty Images)
SHARE:

Kylix (top), Skyphos (above)

Ancient Greek vases frequently depict the revels of men participating in the symposium, an intimate drinking party held in a private home, as well as the consequences of excessive consumption that may have occurred during such gatherings. But just how much wine, mixed with water in a bowl called a krater, would a group have consumed in the course of a typical symposium in early fifth-century B.C. Athens? To answer this question, archaeologist Kathleen Lynch of the

Become a Digital Subscriber Today

Get full access to all content on the ARCHAEOLOGY website and our PDF archive going back to the first publication in March 1948.

Already a Subscriber? Sign In

MORE FROM Alcohol Through the Ages

  • Alcohol Through the Ages November/December 2020

    Achaemenid Wine Connoisseurs

    Iran

    Read Article
    (HIP/Art Resource, NY)
  • Alcohol Through the Ages November/December 2020

    A Taste for the Exotic

    Korea

    Read Article
    (Heritage Image Partnership Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo, National Museum of Korea Collection)
  • Features November/December 2020

    In the Reign of the Sun Kings

    Old Kingdom pharaohs faced a reckoning that reshaped Egypt’s balance of power

    Read Article
    (Kenneth Garrett)
  • Letter from Israel November/December 2020

    The Price of Purple

    Archaeologists have found new evidence of a robust dye industry that endured on the Mediterranean coast for millennia

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Michael Eisenberg)
  • Artifacts November/December 2020

    Illuminated Manuscript

    Read Article
    (National Trust/Mike Hodgson)
  • Digs & Discoveries November/December 2020

    Our Coastal Origins

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Emma Loftus)