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1

Aktaş, Rabia, and Elifnur Çakmak. "Paphlagonia Hadrianopolisi Vaftizhane Yapısında Ele Geçen Kaba Seramikler." Septem Artes 3, no. 1 (2025): 13–46. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15470758.

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Geophysical and GPR studies were conducted in 2013 at Hadrianopolis in Paphlagonia, located in the Eskipazar District of Karabük Province. Based on the data obtained from these studies, excavation work was carried out on the remains of the Inner Castle between 2022 and 2023. The investigations revealed three distinct phases of construction within the structure according to architectural finds. The first phase involved a structure that served as a baptistery, constructed in the 5th century AD and remained in use until the 7th century AD. In the second phase, dated after the 7th century AD, sign
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Bentaher, Fuaad. "General Account of Recent Discoveries at Tocra." Libyan Studies 25 (January 1994): 231–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900006373.

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Short seasons of excavation between 1985 and 1992 were conducted under the supervision of the writer in an open and almost featureless area near the center of the walled city of Tocra. The excavations were part of the Garyunis (Benghazi) University training program, arranged by the Department of Archaeology for undergraduate students.The excavation uncovered the remains of seven buildings and produced a vast quantity of stratified material. Four periods of occupation, Hellenistic, Roman (early and late), Byzantine and Islamic, were encountered within the excavated area.The uppermost levels of
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Yangaki, Anastasia G. "The current state of the research and future perspectives for the methodology and the interpretation of Byzantine pottery of the 11th and 12th centuries AD." Journal of Greek Archaeology 1 (January 1, 2016): 313–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/jga.v1i.653.

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Even though researchers became interested in the study of Middle Byzantine ceramics at a very early stage, in the first decades of the 20th century, it’s only during the past two decades and especially since the beginning of the 21st century that we can observe a more systematic research. Its point of focus is located in the renewed typological classification of some pottery categories; in clarifying issues of dating and provenance; and in dealing with the coarse, usually undecorated pottery, the cooking wares and the transport and storage vessels. Up until then (and in some cases even now) re
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Martinova, Velichka. "EARLY SGRAFFITO WARES FROM THE TERRITORY OF TODAY’S BULGARIA (11TH – 12TH CENTURIES)." Revista CICSA online, Serie Nouă, no. 7 (2021): 95–116. http://dx.doi.org/10.31178/cicsa.2021.7.6.

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The sgraffito pottery production flourished in the Byzantine Empire during the late 11th and 12th centuries. During this period, the Bulgarian territories were occupied by the Empire, which facilitated the penetration and wide distribution of Sgraffito Wares. The South Bulgarian lands had always been a buffer zone and a way of transmission for Byzantine culture, goods, and influence. Sgraffito vessels are discovered not only in Bulgarian medieval towns and fortresses but also in small villages, convents, and seasonal settlements. The sgraffito plates found in them find exact parallels in Byzan
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Masek, Zsófia. "A Sarmatian-period ceramic tripod from Rákóczifalva." Communicationes Archaeologicae Hungariae 2018 (November 29, 2021): 125–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.54640/cah.2018.125.

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A medium-sized late Sarmatian–Hun-period settlement was excavated at the Rákóczifalva-Bagi-földek 5 site in 2006. The present study offers a detailed assessment of a unique vessel from the site, which yielded a very rich ceramic inventory. The large three-legged vessel is without exact parallels in the period’s published material. A review of the late antique parallels suggests that the vessel is an adoption of late Roman-early Byzantine metal vessels or perhaps pottery forms. In spite of its uniqueness, the vessel fits into the range of the special products of late Sarmatian pottery and refle
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Voroshilov, Alexey N., and Olga M. Voroshilova. "ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE OF IRON SMELTING IN BYZANTINE AND EARLY ISLAMIC JERICHO." Rossiiskaia arkheologiia, no. 2 (April 1, 2023): 92–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0869606323020198.

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Excavations in Jericho made it possible to reveal a notable complex of ferrous metallurgy. Archaeological evidence of iron smelting is represented by numerous slags, dozens of iron blooms, and three bloomery furnaces. They are localized mainly in the cultural layer surrounding the pottery kilns. The statistics of the finds indicate a fairly active production of iron in the Jericho workshop, where 59 small iron blooms and their fragments were found. The shape of whole blooms corresponds to a bowl-shaped depression in the lower part of small bloomery furnaces. The foundations of three similar st
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Ginkut, Nataliia Vitalievna. "Imitation of the Late Byzantine Pottery Samples by the Local Production in the Genoese Castle of Cembalo." Античная древность и средние века 50 (2022): 421–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/adsv.2022.50.024.

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The appearance of the local centres of glazed ware production in the Palaiologean Period allowed the development of local schools of parade table ware. In the Crimean Peninsula, the local production centres were active in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. In the Genoese castle of Cembalo, there were glazed ware workshops from the second half of the fourteenth to the third quarter of the fifteenth century. Along with the manufacture of various forms of original pottery, the artisans of these workshops copied the ornamental compositions which were popular in the Mediterranean area. This ar
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Boldyreva, Ekaterina. "Glazed pottery of the Eastern origin in the South part of the Eastern Europe. The main types and sourses of production." Rossiiskaia arkheologiia, no. 4 (December 2021): 82–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s086960630015281-8.

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The article focuses on the analysis of glazed ware imported into the southern regions of Russia from the Early Middle Ages to the Golden Horde period. The author studied most common types of glazed ware and their sources. In order to compare, the paper considers the groups of ware brought to the Pontic and the Volga River regions. From the 7th century in the northern Pontic region, vessels produced in Constantinople appeared. Various groups of Byzantine pottery were recorded there till the beginning of the Golden Horde period. In the Caspian region, glazed ware appeared not earlier than the mi
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Yiannouli, Evyenia. "Kat'Akrotiri on Amorgos: surface pottery from an Early Cycladic acropolis." Annual of the British School at Athens 97 (November 2002): 1–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400017329.

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This is a study of surface ceramic evidence (c. 5,000 sherds) from an Early Cycladic acropolis on Amorgos. A fairly diversified group of domestic ware has been identified, including ‘Amorgos’ and rare types, possibly a tankard and a marble beaker or cup. Compared to stratified evidence from the Cyclades and elsewhere, the chronological range of types falls within EC I/II-EC III A, EC II being the period most heavily represented. In discussing the material with reference to the Cycladic, Helladic and Aegean contexts, attention is drawn to the role of mainland Greece in shaping the local reperto
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Waksman, S. Y., N. D. Kontogiannis, S. S. Skartsis, and G. Vaxevanis. "THE MAIN ‘MIDDLE BYZANTINE PRODUCTION’ AND POTTERY MANUFACTURE IN THEBES AND CHALCIS." Annual of the British School at Athens 109 (November 2014): 379–422. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245414000148.

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The article relates the results of archaeometric and archaeological investigations of the relationships between some well-known types of Byzantine table wares and pottery manufacture in Thebes and Chalcis, focusing on the period from the twelfth to the fourteenth centuries ad.We currently accept that several twelfth–thirteenth century types, such as ‘Green and Brown Painted Ware’, ‘Fine Sgraffito Ware’ and ‘Aegean Ware’, form part of a single, main, long-lasting production of Byzantine ceramics, called here main ‘Middle Byzantine Production’ (MBP), which was distributed and diffused in the who
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Cosma, Călin. "Fast Wheel Gravel-tempered Coarse Ware Found in 7th–10th-Century Cemeteries from Western Romania." Ephemeris Napocensis 31 (February 10, 2022): 283–302. http://dx.doi.org/10.33993/ephnap.2021.31.283.

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Sometime in the 7th century, pottery made with a potter’s wheel reaching a medium rotation speed appeared in the Carpathian Basin. This particular pottery, generically referred to as “Danubian-type pottery”, evolved in different ways from one region to another until it was generalized in the 8th century as a specific type that characterizes large areas in central and south-eastern Europe. Owing to the technical innovations that led to the improvement of the potter’s wheel, pottery also began to be produced on the fast-rotating wheel. However, 7th–10th-century fast wheel pottery from Transylvan
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Maeir, Aren M., and Yael Strauss. "A Pilgrim Flask of Anatolian Origin from Late Byzantine/Early Ummayyad Jerusalem." Anatolian Studies 45 (December 1995): 237–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3642922.

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A large scale archaeological excavation was commenced in 1989, as part of the “Mamilla Project”, an urban re-development project carried out in the area to the west of Jaffa Gate, Jerusalem, Israel (Fig. 2). During the course of the first (1989) season, several complexes of buildings dating from the Late Byzantine and Early Ummayad periods were discovered. These buildings were part of the extra-mural quarters of Jerusalem at the time, and for the most part, were industrial and mercantile in nature.In area A2 of the excavations (Fig. 3), a row of shops was discovered. Of particular interest was
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Tchekhanovets, Yana. "Recycling the Glory of Byzantium." Studies in Late Antiquity 2, no. 2 (2018): 215–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/sla.2018.2.2.215.

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The article is dedicated to one of the less studied aspects of the Byzantine–Early Islamic period transition: the recycling of valuable materials—marble and bronze—as reflected in the archaeological findings discovered during the salvage excavations at the Givati Parking Lot site in Jerusalem. In the course of the work, a portion of one of the major streets of Byzantine Jerusalem was exposed, which once served as an important pilgrimage route of the city. During the Umayyad period the street was severely damaged, and the entire area was turned into an industrial zone. Of special interest are t
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Alonso-Olazabal, Ainhoa, Maria Cruz Zuluaga, Ana Martínez-Salcedo, et al. "Trade Networks in the Neighbouring Roman Provinces of Aquitania-Tarraconensis on the Bay of Biscay: Evidence from Petrographic and Chemical Analyses of Common Coarse Ware Pottery." Minerals 13, no. 7 (2023): 887. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/min13070887.

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Common non-wheel-thrown Roman pottery from the southern Aquitania and north-eastern of Tarraconensis provinces (CNT-AQTA) of the Early and Later Roman Empire (1st to 5th centuries AD) has been studied. Petrological, mineralogical, and chemical analyses were conducted to contrast with the archaeological study of the pottery. The chemical composition of many pottery samples displays different patterns of burial chemical modification, limiting their use for provenance and diffusion studies. Particular emphasis has been paid to the petrographic features of the fabrics, as they do not change during
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Alexandridou, Alexandra. "Archaic pottery and terracottas from the Sanctuary of Poseidon at Kalaureia." Opuscula. Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome 6 (November 2013): 81–150. http://dx.doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-06-05.

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The excavation season of 2009 in the Sanctuary of Poseidon at Kalaureia brought to light a deposit of Archaic pottery and associated metal and other objects in conjunction with a long terrace wall (Wall 49) southeast of the Temple of Poseidon. The deposit in question is the largest accumulation of Archaic material recovered from the entire sanctuary thus far. The fine-decorated, black-glazed and coarse pottery together with the terracotta figurines are discussed in detail in this article. Furthermore, the results of the quantitative analysis of the pottery are presented. The study of the depos
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16

Harrison et al, R. M. "Amorium Excavations 1989: the second preliminary report." Anatolian Studies 40 (December 1990): 205–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3642803.

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This was the second season of excavation at Amorium in east Phrygia, and the team worked for five weeks, from 24 July 1989. Our main aim is to trace archaeological changes and developments within the city from Hellenistic times into the Selcuk period. We carried out a general survey of the Upper Town by a regular 25-metre grid, and we also excavated three trenches, one in the Upper Town and two (which we started last year) in the Lower (Fig. 1). A preliminary analysis is underway of the pottery and small finds, which in the Late Roman and Byzantine periods appear mostly of local manufacture. T
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Parker, S. Thomas. "Nabataean and Roman coarse ware cooking pottery from Aila (Aqaba, Jordan)." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean, no. 30/2 (December 31, 2021): 655–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.2083-537x.pam30.2.02.

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The Roman Aqaba Project seeks to reconstruct diachronically the economic history of the ancient port of Aila on the Red Sea (now modern Aqaba in southern Jordan). Excavations of Aila between 1994 and 2003 yielded an enormous quantity of stratified ceramic evidence. This paper focuses on coarse ware cooking vessels recovered from Aila dating to the 1st to early 5th centuries. Although the potters of Aila were influenced by the ceramic traditions of the Nabataean capital at Petra, they also developed an independent ceramic tradition. Further, the Roman annexation of Nabataea in 106 CE, including
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18

Wilson, D. E., and P. M. Day. "Ceramic regionalism in Prepalatial Central Crete: the Mesara imports at EM I to EM II A Knossos." Annual of the British School at Athens 89 (November 1994): 1–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s006824540001529x.

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This article presents results obtained through detailed stylistic analysis of a body of EM I–EM II A pottery at Knossos in association with a programme of petrographic analysis and scanning electron microscopy. From the Knossian ceramic assemblage, four specific ware groups were chosen for this study on the basis of shape, decoration, and fabric: fine painted, fine grey, painted semi-fine to coarse, and slipped and burnished. It is argued here, on stylistic grounds and on the basis of petrographic analysis, that these groups were imported to Knossos from south central Crete. In addition, scann
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Komar, O. "Archaeological and Archaeomagnetic Dating of Early Medieval Kantsyrka Type Pottery." Archaeologia Bulgarica ХХII, no. 3 (2018): 39–70. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5705974.

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The Early Medieval Alan pottery production center in Kantsyrka valley on Dnieper river was the first evidence of the resumption of mass craft production of goods in the steppe of the Northern Black Sea region during the post-Roman period. This fact, as well as the fact of the unquestionable Alanian North Caucasian origin of the pottery tradition, constantly attract the attention of researchers to the problems of ethnic origin of the population, the reasons for its migration to the Dniepr region, and the lifetime of the settlements. The question of chronology remains one of the most acute probl
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Hayes, J. W. "Early Christian pottery from Knossos: the 1978–1981 finds from the Knossos Medical Faculty Site." Annual of the British School at Athens 96 (November 2001): 431–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400005372.

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Here is presented, along with a revised overall site-plan indicating findspots, the late material from the BSA excavations in the northern cemetery area of ancient Knossos, prior to the construction of the present University buildings. These finds were excluded from the major published site-reports. They relate to the Early Christian martyrion-church complex noted in the preliminary site report. Dating from the period c. AD 400–650, they comprise some small deposits within the church complex, items placed in some of the many ossuaries (osteothekai) surrounding it, and in particular a well/cist
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Tsiachri, Agoritsa, Georgios P. Mastrotheodoros, Harrisis Zoubos, Dimitrios F. Anagnostopoulos, and Konstantinos G. Beltsios. "Kynos Through Time: Decorated Pottery Sherds from Eleven Strata of a Homeric Greek Site." Applied Spectroscopy 72, no. 7 (2018): 1088–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0003702818772819.

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Excavations at the Kynos settlement, a Homeric site and the home of an early school of key Greek pictorial pottery painting, revealed extensive remains of several chronological horizons which continuously span the period from Middle Helladic (∼2100 BC) to Byzantine times (330 AD onwards), along with thousands of decorated sherds. The scope of the present study is the exploration of the technological traits of this pottery, which would contribute substantially to the archaeological understanding of the site. Samples from a sizeable assembly of decorated sherds were studied by means of analytica
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Ghilardi, Matthieu, Tim Kinnaird, Katerina Kouli, et al. "Reconstructing the Fluvial History of the Lilas River (Euboea Island, Central West Aegean Sea) from the Mycenaean Times to the Ottoman Period." Geosciences 12, no. 5 (2022): 204. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12050204.

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This paper aims to reconstruct the alluvial activity for the Lilas river, the second-largest catchment of Euboea Island (Central Western Aegean Sea), for approximately the last three and a half millennia. The middle reaches (Gides basin) exhibit several historical alluvial terraces that were first recognised in the 1980s but have remained poorly studied, resulting in uncertain chronological control of palaeofluvial activity. In order to reconstruct the past fluvial dynamics of the Lilas river, a ca. 2.5 m thick stratigraphic profile has been investigated for granulometry and magnetic parameter
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Khamis, Elias. "THE SHOPS OF SCYTHOPOLIS IN CONTEXT." Late Antique Archaeology 5, no. 1 (2009): 439–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134522-90000117.

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The shops of Scythopolis are contemporary with the initial layout of the Roman city. Similarly to other Roman cities in the East, the major streets of Scythopolis were colonnaded with rows of shops on both sides. While certain monuments and buildings in the city centre changed their character, design and function through time, the streets with their shops alongside, remained the most dominant and unchangeable feature of the city during several centuries. The owners of the shops, and their religious and cultural background, changed during the Roman, Byzantine and Early Islamic periods, but they
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Cameron, Averil. "Late antiquity and Byzantium: an identity problem." Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 40, no. 1 (2016): 27–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/byz.2015.4.

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1975 seems light years away. In parts of the field of Byzantine studies, at any rate, the world has shifted, and perhaps most of all in that contested territory of early Byzantium, otherwise known as late antiquity. The first issue ofByzantine and Modern Greek Studieswas published only four years after Peter Brown’sThe World of Late Antiquity,1and before the ‘explosion’ of late antiquity.2This was also the start of another explosion: the emergence of late antique archaeology as a discipline, leading to its vast expansion and the enormous and ever-growing amount of material available today. For
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Poulter, Andrew. "The Transition to Late Antiquity on the Lower Danube: An Interim Report (1996–8)." Antiquaries Journal 79 (September 1999): 145–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003581500044504.

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A total of 268 sites within a region of c 2,000 square kilometres in northern Bulgaria, extending north from the Stara Planina (Haemus) to the Danube, offers a unique opportunity to study the character and extent of economic and social change which separates the Roman Empire from Late Antiquity. The method involves excavations within the Roman city of Nicopolis, along the course of a remarkable Roman aqueduct, and at the ‘type site’ of Gradishte, a Late Roman and early Byzantine fort where one of the primary goals is to reconstruct its palaeoenvironmental history. This is accompanied by site-s
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Maiko, Vadim, and Irina Teslenko. "Material Culture of Byzantine Sugdeja in the 12th – Early 13th Centuries (To the Question of Chronological Indicators)." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 4. Istorija. Regionovedenie. Mezhdunarodnye otnoshenija, no. 6 (February 2021): 69–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu4.2020.6.5.

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Introduction. The focus of this study is on the material culture of one of the major cities of south-eastern Taurika Sugdeja in the 12th and early 13th centuries, as well as archaeological sources that allow to highlight stratified archaeological complexes and horizons of that time. Special attention is paid to the justification of chronological indicators presented by household objects, decorations, objects of Christian cult and imported red clay glazed ceramics. The latter, based on modern chronological developments and the archaeological situation, is the most important indicator. It is com
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Oh, Kang Won. "The Emergence and Development of Top-Shaped Jars in Top-Shaped Pottery Culture." Pusan Archaeological Society 31 (December 31, 2022): 1–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.47735/odia.2022.31.1.

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A top-shaped jar is a artifact representing top-shaped pottery culture. The top-shaped jar is classified into 7 types(A to G types) and 13 styles[(AI style(Seokgyo-ri style), AII style(Pyodae No. 32 style), BI style(Sinheung-dong style), BII style(Namgyeong style), CI style(Chimchon style), CII style(Seoktan-ri style), CIII (Pyodae fourth layer style), DI style(Pyodae second layer style), DII style(Juam-ri style), EI style(Pyodae first layer style), EII style(Juam-ri style), FI style(Masan-ri style), and FII style(Goyeon-ri style)], depending on differences in overall pottery shapes and in the
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Damjanovic-Vasilic, Ljiljana, Vesna Bikic, Srna Stojanovic, Danica Bajuk-Bogdanovic, Djurdjija Dzodan, and Slavko Mentus. "Application of analytical techniques to the unveiling of the glazing technology of medieval pottery from the Belgrade Fortress." Journal of the Serbian Chemical Society 85, no. 10 (2020): 1329–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/jsc200401036d.

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Medieval glazed ceramics, dated to the early 15th century, excavated at the Belgrade Fortress, Serbia, were investigated by combining optical microscopy, X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD), scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), micro-Raman spectroscopy and multivariate statistical analysis. The decoration and style of the investigated ceramics were characteristic of workshops from different areas of the medieval Serbian State: Ras, Krusevac and Belgrade/Smederevo. Comparison was made with ceramic samples from the same period excavated at the Studenica Monaste
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Piličiauskas, Gytis, Mika Lavento, Markku Oinonen, and Gytis Grižas. "New 14C Dates of Neolithic and Early Metal Period Ceramics in Lithuania." Radiocarbon 53, no. 4 (2011): 629–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200039096.

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Twenty-three samples of charred food remains, charcoal, burned animals, and human bones from 14 Lithuanian prehistoric sites were dated by radiocarbon as part of a dating project oriented towards renewing the prehistoric ceramics chronology. The new dates modified the dating of ceramic styles by hundreds to a thousand years. Three Textile Ware sherds were dated to 4230–2920 cal BC—the oldest known dates of Textile Ware pottery in the East Baltic. The organic-tempered pointed-bottomed Narva and Combed-like Wares were dated to 3970–3370 cal BC, while Bay Coast Ware (Haffküstenkultur, Rzucewo), i
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Karlsson, Lars, Jesper Blid, and Olivier Henry. "Labraunda 2009. A preliminary report on the Swedish excavations." Opuscula. Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome 3 (November 2010): 61–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-03-05.

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The 2009 campaign in Labraunda accomplished three goals: the termination of the excavations in the Byzantine fort on the Acropolis and in the Late Roman Tetraconch and the complete excavation of the impressive marble chamber tomb along the Sacred Way. In the Acropolis Fortress, evidence was found to support the military character of the Byzantine establishment: the rooms along the fortification wall were paved and had a rectangular shape, suggesting defensive rooms. In these rooms sling stones were found. Structures dating from the Hekatomnid period were further investigated this year, and a w
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Malykh, Svetlana E. "LATE POTTERY FROM THE ANCIENT EGYPTIAN TOMB OF NESEMNAU IN GIZA AND FEATURES OF THE FORMATION OF THIEVES’ DEBRIS IN BURIAL SHAFTS." Journal of the Institute of Oriental Studies RAS, no. 1 (19) (2022): 126–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.31696/2618-7302-2022-1-126-139.

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The ancient Egyptian rock-cut tomb of Nesemnau in the north-eastern part of the Giza Necropolis was explored by the Russian Archaeological Mission of the Institute of Oriental Studies RAS in 2015–2017 and 2020. Archaeological study of the three tomb shafts revealed repeated violation of the filling layers due to the numerous robberies; as a result, the original burials of the Old Kingdom were destroyed, and later pottery (827 out of 2602 ceramic samples) and artifacts entered these complexes. Pottery analysis dating from the New Kingdom to the beginning of the 20th century allows speculating o
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Karlsson, Lars, Jesper Blid, and Olivier Henry. "Labraunda 2008. A preliminary report on the Swedish excavations." Opuscula. Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome 2 (November 2009): 57–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.30549/opathrom-02-04.

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The Swedish archaeological project at the Karian sanctuary of Zeus Labraundos celebrated, in 2008, sixty years of work. The year 2008 was very special, both because of these celebrations, but also because of the important finds that came to light during the excavation of the unusual Roman bath that was discovered in 2007. It is built in the shape of a four-leaf clover (the so-called Tetraconch), and can be dated to the first half of the fourth century AD. A large amount of finds were discovered, including superb pieces of plates in African Red Slip and Late Roman C wares, a water flask, and co
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Gasymov, P. P. "Cultural Attribution of Early Bronze Age Tombs Under Kurgans in Azerbaijan." Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia 48, no. 2 (2020): 22–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.17746/1563-0110.2020.48.2.022-028.

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This study focuses on the cultural attribution of a distinct category of Early Bronze Age burials in the eastern piedmont of the Lesser Caucasus, northwestern Azerbaijan, known as “tombs under kurgans” or “kurgans with collective burials in tombs”. There was an opinion that such burials belong to the early period of the Kura-Araxes (or proto-Kura-Araxes) culture. To test this idea, we analyzed ceramics from tombs under kurgans at Shadyly, Uzun-Rama, and Mentesh-Tepe, all of which have radiocarbon dates. Results suggest that the vessels are hand-made, their paste contains no organic temper, and
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Rațiu, Alexandru, Ioan C. Opriș, and Mihai Duca. "Fine wares from the Late Roman ‘Principia’at Capidava (ii)." Cercetări Arheologice 30, no. 1 (2023): 189–216. http://dx.doi.org/10.46535/ca.30.1.11.

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The Late Roman principia from Capidava was built at the end of the 3rd - beginning of the 4th century, most likely during the general reconstruction (phase II) of the fort, as a result of the bellum Scythicum. The building was fully excavated in successive campaigns between 2013-2019. This paper is a follow-up to an initial article, published in 2017, dealing with the fine pottery finds discovered during the 2013-2014 campaigns. In what follows, we will focus on the same category of finds, resulting from the systematic excavation during the 2016 campaign. The 66 items in our catalogue belong t
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Khries, Hashem, and Taher Al-Gonmeen. "Rescue Excavation at the Islamic Site of Umm Zweitineh in Central Jordan, 2012." Journal of Islamic Archaeology 10, no. 1 (2023): 53–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/jia.21405.

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This paper draws on the preliminary results of the rescue excavation conducted by the Department of Antiquities at Umm Zweitineh in central Jordan in 2012. The goal of the excavation was to take urgent action regarding protecting the site as far as possible. Due to budget constraints, the excavation work lasted for only twenty days. The aim of the article is that of providing a clear regional picture of the Islamic settlement through the seventh/eighth and fourteenth centuries AD through retrieving information from the architectural remains and material culture. The architectural relics and ma
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Sedikova, Larissa V., and Stanislav G. Ryzhov. "A Complex of the Early-Eleventh Century Finds from a Cistern in Quarter IX of Chersonese." Materials in Archaeology, History and Ethnography of Tauria, no. XXVI (2021): 90–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.37279/2413-189x.2021.26.90-106.

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This paper discusses a complex of ceramic finds excavated from a cistern in quarter IX in the north-eastern area of Chersonese, which supplied water to a public bath at the first stage of its existence. Although the reasons why the cistern was covered with soil remain unclear, later on residential buildings appeared at this site. The finds published here comprised imported transport and table ceramic wares. The complex included brown-clay flat-handle transport pitchers, presumably from the Taman area; Günsenin I amphorae produced on the Marmara Sea coast to the south-west of Constantinople; Gl
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Weiner, Steve, Alla Nagorsky, Itamar Taxel, et al. "High temperature pyrotechnology: A macro- and microarchaeology study of a late Byzantine-beginning of Early Islamic period (7th century CE) pottery kiln from Tel Qatra/Gedera, Israel." Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 31 (June 2020): 102263. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2020.102263.

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Zissu, Boaz. "Archaeological explorations at ‘En Qobi in the Jerusalem Highlands and the identification of Qube/Qubi." Cercetări Arheologice 30, no. 1 (2023): 263–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.46535/ca.30.1.15.

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The article presents the results of archaeological excavations and surveys undertaken at and near the spring of ‘En Qobi. ‘En Qobi is a spring in the upper reaches of Nahal Qobi, a tributary of Nahal Refai’m, West of Jerusalem. There is evidence of human activity near the spring from the Bronze Age to the present – a span of approximately 3,000 years. The article presents and discusses (a) the spring and its water system; (b) partial excavations and the preservation of the interior of the medieval church located near the spring; (c) H. Tasit and a nearby refuge cave, both located west of the s
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Mills, Philip, and Ulla Rajala. "THE ROMAN CERAMIC MATERIAL FROM FIELD WALKING IN THE ENVIRONS OF NEPI." Papers of the British School at Rome 79 (October 31, 2011): 147–240. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068246211000055.

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This paper explores the ceramic assemblage of the Nepi Survey Project from the third century bc to the seventh century ad. The surface collection allows the detailed characterization of chronology, ware, fabric supply and functional characteristics. The assemblage shows a settlement explosion in the early second century bc, with another major rise from the Augustan period. The sharp decline in the late second to early third centuries ad is visible here, as it is throughout the region. The later peaks of the late fourth to mid-fifth and the mid-sixth centuries ad conform to the late Roman seque
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Gadjiev, Murtazali S., Arsen L. Budaychiev, Abdula M. Abdulaev, and Askekhan K. Abiev. "EXCAVATION OF DERBENT SETTLEMENT IN 2017." History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Caucasus 16, no. 2 (2020): 461–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.32653/ch162461-488.

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The article is dedicated to the results of 2017 season excavations of Derbent settlement which existed before construction of the Derbent defensive complex at the end of 560-s. This settlement was gradually left after the construction of a new city given the new name Derbent (Darband). The cultural layers and the construction remains (rooms 6, 7, 8, 9) of the 5-th – 6-th centuries AD, the medieval Muslim burials which have been dug in the layer of the settlement were open in the southern sector of the excavation area XXV.
 The revealed complex of inhabited and economic constructions inclu
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Gadjiev, Murtazali S., Arsen L. Budaychiev, Abdula M. Abdulaev, and Askerkhan K. Abiev. "EXCAVATION OF DERBENT SETTLEMENT IN 2019." History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Caucasus 18, no. 2 (2022): 519–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.32653/ch182519-542.

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The article is dedicated to the results of 2019 season excavations of Derbent settlement which existed before construction of the Derbent defensive complex at the end of 560-s. This settlement was gradually left after the construction of a new city given the new name Derbent (Darband). The cultural layers and the construction remains (rooms No. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11) of the 5-th – 6-th centuries AD, the medieval Muslim burials (No. 31-37) which have been dug in the layer of the settlement were open in the southern sector of the excavation area XXV.
 The revealed complex of inhabited and economi
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Najafov, Shamil. "Ceramic Braziers Found at the Bronze Age Monuments of Azerbaijan." Nizhnevolzhskiy Arheologicheskiy Vestnik 24, no. 1 (2025): 70–89. https://doi.org/10.15688/nav.jvolsu.2025.1.3.

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During the excavations of the Bronze Age archaeological sites in Azerbaijan, clay braziers were found among the artifacts revealed in the residential areas and, very rarely, in the grave monuments. Since clay braziers were household utensils used for a long time, they are often found broken. Unlike other pottery materials, clay braziers mainly in grey, brown, or red colors, contain a larger amount of coarse sand or crushed fine-grained stones. Ceramic braziers, known in foreign literature as andirons, entered the kitchens and households of ancient Azerbaijani tribes as early as the Chalcolithi
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Petkovic, Sofija, and Aleksandar Kapuran. "Archaeological excavations at Gamzigrad - Romuliana in 2007-2008." Starinar, no. 63 (2013): 287–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/sta1363287p.

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Systematical archaeological excavations at the site Gamzigrad - Felix Romuliana continued in 2007-2008 in the south-eastern part of the fortified imperial palace, in the section of the thermae according to the plan of archaeological research for this site (2005-2009). In 2007, squares L'XXIV, M'XXIV, M'XXIH and M'XXII, which were investigated in 2005 to the horizon c, dated to the end of the 5th and the beginning of the 6th centuries, were completely excavated to the level of the porch of the earlier fortification of Romuliana (Plan 1). The stratigraphy of the cultural layers in these squares
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RUSU, Adrian A. "Mănăstirea Bistrița (Neamț) și Alexandru cel Bun. Revizii de interpretare." Studii și Materiale de Istorie Medie 41, no. 1 (2024): 187–228. http://dx.doi.org/10.62616/smim.2023.08.

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Between 2017-2022, the Bistrița monastery (Moldavia) was subjected to an extensive renovation, which assumed archaeological supervision. As a result, a number of new data and materials were unearthed enabling a different understanding of some elements of the history of the place. A part of these are developed in these pages. 1. When and how did the history of the monastery begin. Subsuming the historical and archaeological data confirms the foundation of the monastery took place around 1407, on a territory, where earlier wooden structures did not exist. The general context is related to the ve
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Tovkailo, M. "GARG ON BUH — A JUNCTION OF ROADS AND COMMUNICATIONS." Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine 54, no. 1 (2025): 233–48. https://doi.org/10.37445/adiu.2025.01.11.

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The multi-layered settlement and burial ground of Gard are located on the right bank of the Southern Bug at a distance of 2.5 km south of the Bohdanivka Village, Voznesensky district, Mykolaiv region. The site is placed in the lower part of a wedge-shaped slope, bounded by two bayrach ravines with a streams, on the edge of a terrace-like ledge of the bank which corresponds to the level of the first terrace above flood-plain, 4—14 m higher of the summer water level. For a number of the cultures represented at the Gard settlement (Bug-Dnister, Seredni Stoh, all stages of Trypillya, Usatove, Anti
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ΓΕΡΜΑΝΙΔΟΥ, Σοφία. "Μαρτυρίες ιστορικών πηγών και αρχαιολογικών ευρημάτων για μια μορφή "βιολογικού" πολέμου με τη χρήση των μελισσών στο Βυζάντιο". BYZANTINA SYMMEIKTA 23 (2 грудня 2013): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/byzsym.1046.

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Karađole, Ana, and Igor Borzić. "Ceramic finds from the Byzantine fort of Gradina on the island of Žirje." Archaeologia Adriatica 14, no. 1 (2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.15291/archeo.3391.

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Repeated excavations of the area of the early Byzantine fort on Žirje, an island in the Šibenik archipelago, resulted in recovery of a substantial amount of movable finds, predominantly pottery. Most finds date to the period of Justinian's reconquista in the mid-6th century when the fort was used, but there are also some artifacts of earlier or later dating (Iron Age, Hellenistic and early Imperial periods; medieval and postmedieval periods) whose presence is explained by continuous strategic importance of the fort position. Late antique material has been analyzed comprehensively in terms of t
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Michalik, Michał, Małgorzata Kajzer, Urszula Wicenciak, Jerzy Oleksiak, Kamila Niziołek, and Ewdoksia Papuci-Władyka. "(Re)discovering Street A in Nea Paphos, Cyprus. Results of Trial Trench III at Maloutena (season 2021)." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean 2024 (2024). https://doi.org/10.37343/uw.2083-537x.pam33.03.

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This paper discusses data from excavations at Trial Trench III, set in the western part of the Villa of Theseus in Nea Paphos, Cyprus. The study aims to reconsider the diachronic development of Street A, located at the site of Maloutena, based on the results of stratigraphic analysis correlated with a typological study of collected pottery assemblages. More than 15000 pottery fragments representing a chronology ranging from the Late Classical (4th century BC) to the Byzantine period (7th century AD) were examined in their stratigraphic contexts in order to clarify the sequence observed during
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Lightfoot, Chris. "CITY AND COUNTRYSIDE IN BYZANTINE ANATOLIA: AMORIUM." PROPONTICA, September 17, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.56170/propontica.1530180.

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Amorium is a key site for the period AD 700-900 owing to its historical importance as the capital of the Anatolic Theme. The well preserved remains provide an exceptional opportunity to study the layout and function of the Byzantine city, and the destruction layers from the capture of Amorium by the Arabs in 838 create a fixed horizon and reference point for the entire archaeology and material culture of early to mid-ninth century Anatolia. The evidence from twenty years of excavation points to a large and prosperous city, where various trades and crafts were practised and which served as the
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de Vincenz, Anna. "Naḥal Peḥar: The Hellenistic–Byzantine Ceramic Assemblages". Hadashot Arkheologiyot - Excavations and Surveys in Israel, 31 грудня 2019. https://doi.org/10.69704/jhaesi.116.2004.25675b.

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In February-March 2015, a trial excavation was conducted south of Nahal Pehar and east of the Geva'ot Bar settlement (Permit Nos. A-7312-A, A-7313; central map ref. 1775/5848), prior to the expansion of the settlement. The excavation, on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority and financed by the Ministry of Construction and Housing, was directed by E. Haddad. The excavation yielded scant remains of the Iron Age, remains of building (warehouses?) from the Hellenistic- Early Roman periods and a farmhouse from the Byzantine period. A. de Vincenz studied pottery from the classical periods, and
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