Lewis Short
carchēsĭum (noun N) = καρχήσιον: .
* A Greek drinking - cup or beaker, slightly contracted in the middle, with slender handles which reached from the rim to the bottom (usu. in plur.), Verg. G. 4, 380; id. A. 5, 77; Ov. M. 7, 246; Val. Fl. 2, 656; Sil. 11, 301 al.; cf. Müll. Arch. § 299, a.
* The similarly formed upper part of a mast, mast-head, scuttle; in plur., Lucil. and Cat. ap. Non. p. 546, 23; Luc. 5, 418; cf. Macr. S. 5, 21.—In sing.: insigne,App. M. 11, p. 264, 40; id. Flor. 4, p. 364, 8.
* The upright beam of a crane, Vitr. 10, 5; 15, 22 Schneid.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary