Oltos
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Oltos
Summary
Oltos is a human[1]. He was born on January 1, 600 BC[2]. He died on January 1, 500 BC[3]. He worked as a black-figure vase painter[4], red-figure vase painter[5], and Attic vase-painter[6]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month, #7,299 of 1,000,298).[7]
Key Facts
- Oltos was born on January 1, 600 BC[2].
- Oltos died on January 1, 500 BC[3].
- Oltos held citizenship in Classical Athens[8].
- Ancient Greek was Oltos's native language[9].
- Oltos's professions included black-figure vase painter[4].
- Oltos worked as a red-figure vase painter[5].
- Oltos worked as an Attic vase-painter[6].
- Oltos's field of work was red-figure pottery[10].
- Oltos's field of work was Attic vase-painting[11].
- Oltos's field of work was Greek vases[12].
- Oltos's field of work was black-figure pottery[13].
- Oltos's field of work was bilingual vase painting[14].
- A notable student of Oltos was Euphronios[15].
- Oltos was a member of Pioneer Group[16].
- Oltos is recorded as male[17].
- Oltos's instance of is recorded as human[18].
- Oltos's Commons category is recorded as Oltos[19].
- Oltos's residence is recorded as Classical Athens[20].
- Oltos's work location is recorded as Kerameikos[21].
- Oltos's partner in business or sport is recorded as Nikosthenes[22].
- Oltos's partner in business or sport is recorded as Psiax[23].
- Oltos's partner in business or sport is recorded as Euxitheos[24].
- Oltos's partner in business or sport is recorded as Kachrylion[25].
- Oltos's partner in business or sport is recorded as Chelis[26].
- Oltos's partner in business or sport is recorded as Tleson[27].
Body
Origins and Family
Oltos was born on January 1, 600 BC[2]. Ancient Greek was his native language[9].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include black-figure vase painter[4], red-figure vase painter[5], and Attic vase-painter[6]. Fields of work include red-figure pottery[10], a pottery style[28]; Attic vase-painting[11], an art style[29], in Classical Athens[30]; Greek vases[12]; black-figure pottery[13], a pottery style[31]; and bilingual vase painting[14], a pottery style[32]. A notable student of Oltos was Euphronios[15].
Death and Burial
Oltos died on January 1, 500 BC[3].
Why It Matters
Oltos ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2 views/month, #7,299 of 1,000,298).[7] He has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[33]
FAQs
What did Oltos do for work?
Oltos worked as black-figure vase painter[4], red-figure vase painter[5], and Attic vase-painter[6].