The goblet is 14.5 cm high and 14.5 cm across; it weighs 295.8 grams.[2] It has a stem, a Vapheio cup–shaped body, and two handles in the style of a kantharos.[3] The cup is the only known example of the Vapheio shape to have a stem; it is also unusual for such a small cup to have multiple handles.[4]
Each handle is decorated with a golden bird, which Schliemann observed was reminiscent of the cup of Nestor described in the Iliad.[5] The birds have since been identified by Spiros Marinatos as falcons, rather than the doves which are on the Iliadic cup.[6] J.T. Hooker suggests that the cup is an adaptation of a Cretan design made by a craftsman on the Greek mainland.[7] Despite the unusual design and value of the gold used to make the cup, it shows signs of poor-quality or hasty craftsmanship: for instance tool marks are still visible on the cup, and the rivets used to attach the handles to the base compromise the vessel's watertightness.[8]
Aulsebrook, Stephanie (2019). Materialising Mythology: The Cup of Nestor from Shaft Grave IV at Mycenae. Sympozjum Egejskie: Papers in Aegean Archaeology. Vol. 2. University of Warsaw.
Davis, Ellen N. (1977). The Vapheio cups and Aegean gold and silver ware. New York: Garland.
Gaunt, Jasper (2017). "Nestor's Cup and its Reception". In Slater, Niall W. (ed.). Voice and Voices in Antiquity.
Hooker, J.T. (1976). Mycenaean Greece.
Schliemann, Heinrich (2010) [1878]. Mycenae: A Narrative of Researches and Discoveries at Mycenae and Tiryns.