Kylix

Greek drinking cup with 2 looped handles on a shallow bowl atop a narrow stem.  An important component of the symposium; a ritualized drinking party of elite Greek men.


Although there are more than thirty styles of Ancient Greek drinking vessels, the kylix is perhaps the most common of the Attic vases. It is a two-handled bowl with a footed stem. They range from shallow to deep in size, stem or stemless. Because the kylix was a typical vessel at drinking parties, or symposiums, scenes of everyday life or mythology were depicted around the surface of the kylix. The tondo, or the bottom inside of the vessel, would often depict drinking scenes. - https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/ancient-greek-pottery-terms/