In "Handbook for the Ruins and Museums of Rome" from 1855, Emil Braun mentions:
I saw another one, but there the hero is claimed to be Heracles, but he isn't wearing the Lion skin, neither a beard (and is too handsome). Can that be the same vase and the Twitter user mistaken?
Handbook for the Ruins and Museums of Rome, Page 488:
I can't find any image of that vase. I checked my books about vase paintings too, without any success. Is there a way to get more information about it or maybe a picture?Another vase-painting, discovered at Perugia, represents Jason at the important moment, when with drawn sword he enters the monster's jaws, evidently with the intention of overcoming it in this manner;
I saw another one, but there the hero is claimed to be Heracles, but he isn't wearing the Lion skin, neither a beard (and is too handsome). Can that be the same vase and the Twitter user mistaken?
Handbook for the Ruins and Museums of Rome, Page 488: