Pottery & Ceramics
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5th century Anglian domestic pottery made by either the pinch pot technique or by coiling.
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Viking period vessels that can be used to store food.
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Revised versions of papers presented at the Conference on Anglo-Saxon Pottery which took place in the Castle Museum, Norwich, from 18 to 20 April, 1958, under the auspices of the Council for British Archaeology. Subjects include: the continental background; Anglo-Saxon pottery of the Pagan period; Middle-Saxon pottery; and pottery of the Late Anglo-Saxon period in England, the regional and chronological groups of local pottery and imports from the continent.
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Jug, red clay with splashes of brown glaze (found in Corinth); Cup, white clay with yellow glaze and red clay slip (Corinth); Bowl, white clay with yellow glaze and red clay slip (Corinth); Plate, white clay with greenish-yellow glaze (Constantinople); Lamp, white clay, yellow glaze in upper bowl only (Constantinople)
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Articles on prehistoric origins of ceramics; the history of the potter's wheel; early firings & kilns and frits & glazes; and ceramics of Crete & Mycenae, ancient Greece, pre-Roman Europe, Etruria, Rome, and prehistoric China.
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By members of Marca Brandenburgensis (German).
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Cotswold Museum Service cares for around one and a half million archaeolog ical and social history objects in the Council 9;s collection s. Many of the objects are displayed at the recently refurbishe d and extended Corinium Museum, Cirenceste r.
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The Jamestown Ceramics Research Group was formed to identify and define all the ceramic ware types that appear on pre-1650 Jamestown and vicinity sites.
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The Longmarket excavation is proving to be exceptional, both archaeologically and ceramically, with many new and intriguing finds of all periods. There are stratified sequences incorporation a remarkable quantity of ceramically rich garderobes, cess-tanks and rubbish pits. Moreover there are good indications that this sequence extends back to at least the ninth century. The features and finds from Longmarket's c. 1150-1650 levels are an unexpected and timely bonus.
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Medieval kitchen ceramics, earthenware of different varieties, and stoneware.
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MPRG was founded to bring together people with an interest in the pottery vessels that were made, traded, and used in Europe between the end of the Roman period and the 16th century.
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The French national museum of ceramics.
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This paper seeks in the first place to give some indication of the range of these industries in a few English forests of the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, and then to describe their organizati on.
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Three pages.
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Ceramics at the Ashmolean Museum.
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Describes techniques of manufacture and main types of pottery available in 10th and 11th century Britain.
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We are five museums whose main interest lies in Rhenish ceramics - no wonder as our locations represent well-known pottery centres on the left and right of the Rhine river. We would like to draw your attention to the data bank as a part of our presentation. We are working on displaying our complete stocks of ceramics here. But we do not only want to acquaint you with the products of past generations of craftsmen. The programmes of our museums also include special exhibitions on a large variety of themes, international pottery markets, creative hands-on courses and an extensive service offer for children and adults.
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For almost a millennium , a modest wooden ship lay underwater off the coast of Serce Limani, Turkey, filled with evidence of trade and objects of daily life. The ship trafficked in both the Byzantine and Islamic worlds of its time. The ship is known as "the Glass Wreck" because its cargo included three metric tons of glass cullet, including broken Islamic vessels, and eighty pieces of intact glassware. In addition, it held glazed Islamic bowls, red-ware cooking vessels, copper cauldrons and buckets, wine amphoras, weapons, tools, jewelry, fishing gear, remnants of meals, coins, scales and weights, and more. This first volume of the complete site report introduces the discovery, the methods of its excavation , and the conservati on of its artifacts. Chapters cover the details of the ship, its contents, the probable personal possession s of the crew, and the picture of daily shipboard life that can be drawn from the discoverie s.
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Information about British archaeology, pottery and other ceramics, burial archaeology, and human skeletal remains.
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Medieval pottery, kilns, modern equivalents, tiles.
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There appear to be three variations of potters wheel used during the Middle Ages in Europe: the cartwheel type or tour au baton; the strutted wheel or double wheel; and the kick wheel.
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The overall objective of the study is the elucidation of the whole network of pottery production, importation and distribution within a spatially defined area over the whole of the Roman period, in so far as the available data allow this.
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Using a potter's wheel to shape clay pots, drinking vessels and other clay items.
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Two of the most significant medieval pots found on the Longmarket site; both are glazed wheel-thrown jugs in what is known as London-type ware.
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Includes several photos of medieval tiraz, pre-17th century European and Middle Eastern ceramics, and medieval glassware.
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Waterford is Ireland 9;s oldest city, founded by Viking raiders in 914 A.D. The city centre was extensivel y excavated between 1986 and 1992 and the range, quantity and quality of what was found from Waterford& #39;s Viking and Medieval past, surpassed all expectatio ns. Waterford Museum of Treasures brings together for the first time the excavated objects and the historic municipal collection and displays them in optimum conditions . The exhibition celebrates the ethnic, cultural and religious diversity of all who contribute d to the making of Waterford.
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Part of Pottery in Perspective, an innovative project to provide information on the pottery used, and made, in Worcestershire from prehistory to c 1900AD.
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Category Stats
Subcategories: 6
Listings: 40 (69 counting subcategories)
Regular: 40
Last listing added: 07/13/10
Listings: 40 (69 counting subcategories)
Regular: 40
Last listing added: 07/13/10