As of 2026-07-08, Borghese Vase tops the list with 1.35 m.
- #1 Borghese Vase — 1.35 m
Roman era ornamental garden vase
The Borghese Vase is a monumental bell-shaped krater sculpted in Athens from Pentelic marble in the second half of the 1st century BC as a garden ornament for the Roman market; it is now in the Louvre Museum. Read more on Wikipedia.
Wikidata - #2 Metropolitan Museum of Art 34.11.2 — 0.94 m source Wikidata
- #3 Louvre CA 3276 — 0.88 m source Wikidata
- #4 Euphronios Krater — 0.55 m
red-figure chalice krater by the Attic painter Euphronios
source Wikidata - #5 Gela krater — 0.47 m
ancient Greek krater used as funeral urn, made around 470 B.C.
source Wikidata - #6 Sosibios Vase — 0.43 m
The Sosibios Vase is a Neo-Attic marble krater of the Hellenistic period. It is attributed by signature to Sosibios, a Greek sculptor who was active in Rome during the end of the Roman Republic, and is dated to approximately 50 BCE. It is Sosibios' only known work. Read more on Wikipedia.
Wikidata - #7 Campanian red-figure bell-krater — 0.41 m source Wikidata
- #8 Hermes and a young warrior. — 0.41 m
crater from the Louvre Museum
source Wikidata - #9 Attic red-figure dinoid volute krater and stand — 0.41 m
ancient Greek vase by Meleager Painter in the Getty Villa
source Wikidata - #10 Apulian red-figure calyx crater — 0.40 m
crater from Underworld Painter
source Wikidata