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1

Cameron, Fiona. "The Roman Pottery." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 53, s1 (1987): 90–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0079497x00078622.

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The general condition of the Roman pottery from this site, which is very fragmentary and badly abraded, probably indicates that it has been disturbed a good deal since its deposition by subsequent agricultural or other activity and it is therefore unlikely that much of it was found in its original contexts. By far the majority of the material consists of coarse ware body sherds and the limited proportion of fine wares for ¿ill periods is probably indicative of the humble, domestic nature of the occupation. The evidence from the pottery, such as it is, suggests that the site was occupied fairly
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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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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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Bailey, Donald M. "Excavations at Sparta: the Roman stoa, 1988–91 Preliminary report, part 1: (b) Hellenistic and Roman pottery." Annual of the British School at Athens 88 (November 1993): 221–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400015963.

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The pottery described comes from areas of the Roman stoa that were selected by the excavators as important. Most groups contained quantities of local tiles, glazed or unglazed, and large numbers of unidentifiable body sherds. The vast majority of the pottery was locally made and is micaceous, normally very micaceous. Its normal colour is orange of various shades, but it can be a light brown; fired in a reducing atmosphere the body is grey, and this can have a grey slip. There was considerable use of black glaze and red-to-brown slip on Laconian vessels, both coarse and fine; black glaze seems
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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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Koulianos, Pamela K. "Testing the Petra Garden and Pool Complex chronology through the ceramics." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean, no. 30/2 (December 31, 2021): 611–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.2083-537x.pam30.2.10.

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The Petra Garden and Pool Complex in the ancient city center has been dated based on stratigraphy and an array of diagnostic finds. The present study of the coarse wares from selected contexts at the site (augmented by amphorae and fine wares) aims to show corroborative evidence from the ceramic assemblage to support the dating of three major phases in the history of the complex: the construction of the monumental Nabataean garden and pool complex in the end of the 1st century BCE, the Roman renovations in the early 2nd century CE and, last but not least, the second destruction that ended the
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7

Riccardi, Maria Pia, Deneb Cesana, Maya Musa, Sergio Martini, and Francesco Zucca. "Petro-Archaeometric Study of Pre-Roman Pottery from the Archaeological Site of Bec Berciassa (Roccavione, Cuneo, North-West Italy): Technological Remarks from Petrographic Study of Tempers." Interdisciplinaria Archaeologica Natural Sciences in Archaeology XIII, no. 2 (2022): 155–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.24916/iansa.2022.2.5.

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The petro-archaeometric study of ceramics from the Rittatore excavations, Bec Berciassa archaeological site, was carried out on pottery sherds attributed to an older phase dating back to the Late Bronze Age. This collection represents a small sampling of pottery and the chronology of most of this material is homogeneously ascribable to a period between the 6th and the beginning of the 4th century BC (Iron Age). In addition to the archaeometric study, a geological survey highlighted the resources of the area potentially useful for the development of prehistoric communities, including resources
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8

Korkmaz, Zafer. "Cooking wares of the newly excavated A and B Buildings in Anemurium." Selçuk Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Dergisi, no. 52 (December 16, 2024): 255–76. https://doi.org/10.21497/sefad.1458922.

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This paper focuses on the typological diversity of the cooking pottery recovered from excavations of the buildings, took place during the 2018 to 2021 field seasons. The total area encompassed by the buildings is 28.20 metres by 10.60 metres. The buildings, designated A and B, encompass a total floor area of approximately 240 square metres and contain twelve rooms. The entirety of the cooking wares in question, as discussed in this article, were retrieved from Buildings A and B. A fundamental typology of the coarse wares was established for the early Roman to late Roman periods of Anemurium, a
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Menozzi, Oliva, Sonia Antonelli, Angela Cinalli, Maria Cristina Mancini, and Silvano Agostini. "Lamluda: from the excavation to the archaeometric analysis." Libyan Studies 45 (November 2014): 65–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/lis.2014.9.

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AbstractIn the last ten years the Archaeological Mission of Chieti University in Cyrenaica has investigated, through intensive field surveys and excavations, several contexts of the Cyrenaican chora. Among the many recorded settlements, Lamluda is the most interesting because of its urban organisation, productivity and location at the intersection of the main road network. Our aim is to present the preliminary data from the mapping, survey and excavation of the site, including the results of the archaeometric analysis and the epigraphic study. Among the copious ceramic finds the Roman coarse w
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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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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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ELGHAREB, Walid Kamel. "ANALYSIS AND RESTORATION OF GRECO-ROMAN POTTERY IN EGYPT." International Journal of Conservation Science 14, no. 4 (2023): 1327–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.36868/ijcs.2023.04.04.

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The research aims to identify features of the industry and assess the pottery damage through various examinations and analyses, such as examination by polarised microscope (PLM), examination by Scanning Electron Microscope with Energy Dispersive X-ray unit "SEM-EDX", analysis by X-ray diffraction powder XRD, and thermal analysis TGA. Archaeometric features of archaeological pottery were identified. The used clay is Nile Clay; the additives are sand, limestone powder, pottery powder (grog), and straw. The moulding technique is the hand and potter wheel technique. The surface treatment is a red
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13

Singer, Karen. "Pottery of the Early Roman Period from Betar." Tel Aviv 20, no. 1 (1993): 98–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/tav.1993.1993.1.98.

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14

Biddulph, Edward. "What's in a Name? Graffiti on Funerary Pottery." Britannia 37 (November 2006): 355–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068113x00001847.

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ABSTRACTFascicules 7 and 8 of Roman Inscription of Britain II, dealing with samian and coarse pottery respectively, contain some 60 examples of graffiti associated with funerary contexts. Most graffiti are personal names and traditionally these were thought to record the names of the deceased. Analysis has revealed, however, that the names are more likely to be those of mourners or gift-givers. This is suggested by case-endings (graffiti that indicate possession are relatively few), the presence of multiple names in single graves, and the observation that many names were inscribed on ancillary
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15

Gamureac, Ștefan-Emilian, Florin Topoleanu, and Sorin-Cristian Ailincăi. "Roman Pottery from Niculițel-Cornet (Tulcea County, Southeastern Romania)." Peuce Serie Nouă, no. 21 (2023): 75–128. http://dx.doi.org/10.62781/peucesn.21.03.

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The paper presents the Roman era pottery discovered during the 1988 and 2000 rescue archaeological excavations at Niculiţel–Cornet, Tulcea County, Romania, prior to the construction of the methane gas pipe in the area. The assemblage consists of pottery of Pontic, Oriental and Western origins, while the functional categories represented are kitckenware, tableware, amphorae. Handmade pottery of local tradition is also present. The fine ware is represented by terra sigillata, barbotine decorated vessels, Pontic sigillata and imitations. The majority of the pottery can be dated to the 2nd -3 rd c
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16

Sanders, G. D. R. "Excavations at Sparta: the Roman stoa, 1988–91 Preliminary report, Part 1: (c) Medieval pottery." Annual of the British School at Athens 88 (November 1993): 251–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245400015975.

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Contexts recently excavated by the BSA in the Roman stoa at Sparta contain pottery dating from the 12th to early 14th centuries. The bulk of the material dates to the first half of the 13th cent., and demonstrates that certain styles of pottery decoration, once considered to be mainly 12th-cent. in date, continue in currency much longer. These contexts show that Champlevé (Morgan's ‘Incised ware’) decorated with animal motives in the tondo are companion pieces of Glaze Painted (Morgan's ‘Green and Brown Painted group V’) and late Slip Painted wares. The descriptively (but confusingly) named ‘P
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17

Harrison et al, R. M. "Amorium Excavations 1990: The Third Preliminary Report." Anatolian Studies 41 (December 1991): 215–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3642941.

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This was the third season of excavation at Amorium in east Phrygia, and the team worked for four weeks, from 1 August 1990. The archaeological aim was to study social change and development from the Hellenistic period to the Medieval, in particular the Late Roman period and so-called Dark Ages. We completed a detailed survey in the Upper Town, worked in three trenches (two of them initiated last year [L and AB] in the Upper and Lower Town, and one which was new [the Church] in the Lower Town), and further study was made of pottery and small finds. This is a new archaeological subject in this p
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18

Ottományi, Katalin. "Late Roman pottery from Room III/North at the Visegrád-Gizellamajor fort." Acta Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 71, no. 1 (2020): 15–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/072.2020.00002.

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AbstractPottery at the late Roman fort of Visegrád-Gizellamajor contains both forms common in the 4th century as well as new ones, which appear at the turn of the 4th and 5th centuries. On traditional Roman household pottery and glazed vessels new surface ornaments (incised and notched) and new designs (fired yellowish-white, very gritty fabric) appear. Additionally, there are vessels with smoothed and smoothed-in ornaments. Although the excavators distinguished various layers in the fort, pottery from the layers often fit together. What survived to the greatest extent were the materials from
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19

Kusiak, Jarosław, Mariusz Rychter, and Marta Stasiak-Cyran. "Attempts at thermoluminescence dating of fired materials from the Przeworsk Culture settlements." Geochronometria 38, no. 4 (2011): 359–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/s13386-011-0026-5.

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AbstractThe thermoluminescence (TL) dating method has a significant measurement error margin reaching almost 10%. Due to this fact it could be considered as little effective in case of such sites from the Roman period as burial grounds with many artefacts useful for archaeological dating. However, for many settlements from this period, where pottery is the only kind of artefacts, the TL method can give notable results. The main purpose of the study was to make an attempt at TL dating of pottery and clay daub samples from the Nieszawa Kolonia and Kręcieszki sites and to compare the obtained dat
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20

Fischer-Genz, Bettina, Yvonne Gerber, and Hanna Hamel. "Introduction: "Roman Pottery in the Near East: Where, Whence, Whither?" Second Round Table, Amman, 2014. In memoriam S. Thomas Parker (1950–2021)." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean, no. 30/2 (December 31, 2021): 557–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.2083-537x.pam30.2.31.

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The initial idea for this kind of workshop on “Roman Pottery in the Near East” went back to the conference on Archaeology and Archaeometry in Parma and Pisa in 2008. We became very enthusiastic about the idea to initialise our own series of pottery workshops in which we would strive to connect scholars and researchers currently working on pottery from the Roman period in the Near East, mainly Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Israel, hoping to establish an academic network that would provide a platform for discussions for researchers of all levels that might transcend political differences. The 2014
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Gerrard, James. "Finding the Fifth Century: A Late Fourth- and Early Fifth-Century Pottery Fabric from South-East Dorset." Britannia 41 (June 17, 2010): 293–312. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068113x10000097.

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ABSTRACTThis paper describes a type of pottery made in the same region as Dorset Black Burnished Ware that can be shown to be current during the late fourth and early fifth centuries. This pottery — here named South-East Dorset Orange Wiped Ware — can be used as a diagnostic artefact to identify sites and features of the very late Roman period in Dorset. It also appears to be associated with a new architectural tradition typified by the ‘sunken featured buildings’ present at the late and post-Roman site of Poundbury.
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Juma, Abdurahman M. "The Swahili and the Mediterranean worlds: pottery of the late Roman period from Zanzibar." Antiquity 70, no. 267 (1996): 148–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00083009.

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Mortimer Wheeler famously tied together the worlds of ancient Rome and ancient India by finding Roman ceramics stratified into levels at Arikamedu, in south India. Late Roman pottery from far down the East African coast now permits the same kind of matching link from the Mediterranean to a distant shore, this one in the Swahili world.
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Weźranowska, Ania, and Anna Wodzińska. "Pottery from Tomb MMA 28 at Deir el-Bahari: preliminary remarks." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean, no. 30/1 (December 31, 2021): 79–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.2083-537x.pam30.1.05.

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The clearance of Tomb MMA 28 at Deir el-Bahari yielded mixed pottery material dating from the Middle Kingdom to modern times. The article presents, in chronological order, some of the most characteristic vessels representing each phase (with the exception of the late Roman period, which is to be studied separately). Among them are Middle Kingdom pointed bottles and Marl C jars, New Kingdom double and triple bottles, kernoi, beer jars and blue-painted pottery, as well as Ptolemaic painted pottery.
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Smogorzewska, Anna. "Local and imported pottery in the Neolithic Gulf: a new perspective from the site of Bahra 1 in Kuwait." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean 25 (May 15, 2017): 595–617. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0010.2362.

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The paper presents a new perspective on pottery traditions in the Gulf during the Neolithic period, based on new data from the Ubaid-related site of Bahra 1 in Kuwait. The site yielded an assemblage containing several different pottery types, classified as Ubaid Ware and Coarse Red Ware. These pottery groups were varied in many aspects: morphological types, technology, and provenance. Their main characteristics and cultural context are discussed, as well as the cross--pottery connections. The significance of these ceramic vessels for the Gulf population and their socio-economic context are als
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Quercia, A., A. Johnston, A. Bevan, J. Conolly, and A. Tsaravopoulos. "ROMAN POTTERY FROM AN INTENSIVE SURVEY OF ANTIKYTHERA, GREECE." Annual of the British School at Athens 106 (November 2011): 47–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245411000037.

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Recent intensive survey over the entire extent of the small island of Antikythera has recovered an episodic sequence of human activity spanning some 7,000 years, including a Roman pottery assemblage that documents a range of important patterns with respect to land use, demography and on-island consumption. This paper addresses the typological and functional aspects of this assemblage in detail, and also discusses Roman period Antikythera's range of off-island contacts and affiliations.
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Bognár, Katalin Boglárka. "Yellow Pottery in the Late Avar Period." Dissertationes Archaeologicae 3, no. 10 (2023): 421–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.17204/dissarch.2022.421.

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Review article of PhD thesis submitted in 2022 to the Archaeological Doctoral Programme, Doctoral School of History, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest under the supervision of Takács Miklós.In her PhD dissertation, the author surveyed the yellow pottery finds of the Late Avar Period, collecting 1,032 fragments and complete vessels from 232 archaeological features. The term yellow pottery as a terminus technique refers to a pottery type characterised by a very diverse material composition, production method, shape, and decoration set.The related find material was classified into the following
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27

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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28

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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Feveile, Claus, and Pia Bennike. "Lustrupholm – Et brandgravfelt fra ældre bronzealder under flad mark." Kuml 51, no. 51 (2002): 109–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/kuml.v51i51.102995.

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LustrupholmA flat cremation cemetery from the early Bronze AgeBronze Age burial custom is usually associated with large burial mounds containing rich inhumation graves. However, this picture of the burial custom in the Bronze Age is now complemented by an important find from Lustrupholm (fig. 1), which differs from theusual picture in a number of ways, as we are here dealing with a flat cremation cemetery from the early Bronze Age.Twenty-three cremation graves were detected (fig. 2), seventeen of which were concent rated in the same area with out overlapping.At a distance of between nine and n
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Stoner, Wesley D. "Interpolity Pottery Exchange in the Tuxtla Mountains, Southern Veracruz, Mexico." Latin American Antiquity 24, no. 3 (2013): 262–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.7183/1045-6635.24.3.262.

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Neutron activation analysis (NAA) of Coarse Orange jars demonstrates economic exchange among the Classic period political capitals of Totocapan, Matacapan, and Teotepec in the Tuxtla Mountains of southern Veracruz, Mexico. Matacapan, in particular, displays evidence of intensive pottery production at large workshops at the southern margin of the site. Comoapan (Area 411) and Area 199 present configurations of kilns, ceramic densities, and assemblage characteristics that suggest production for exchange beyond the site's boundaries. Both of these production facilities specialized in the producti
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Iliescu, Iulia-Alexandra, Radu-Octavian Stănescu, and Valentin-Victor Bottez. "New Data Regarding the Chronology of the Roman Rural Settlement from the Beidaud Archaeological Microzone." Revista CICSA online, Serie Nouă, no. 8 (2022): 76–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.31178/cicsa.2022.8.5.

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The Beidaud Archaeological Microzone, located west of the commune of Beidaud (Tulcea County), groups a series of archaeological sites dating from various periods: a Neolithic site, a fortified settlement dated from the First and Second Iron Age/Archaic period until the Late Roman period, a Roman rural settlement, and an Early Roman tumular necropolis. In this paper we will present the results of the surface survey carried out during the 2020 campaign, focusing on the area of the Roman settlement, where a significant quantity of archaeological materials, exclusively pottery, was discovered. Aft
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Negru, Mircea. "POTTERY KILN DISCOVERED IN THE ROMAN PERIOD SITE FROM REŞCA-ROMULA." Analele Universităţii din Craiova seria Istorie 28, no. 1 (2023): 7–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.52846/aucsi.2023.1.01.

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"The archaeological site from Reșca-Romula is located on the high terrace of the Lower Olt River (Fig. 1: 1), on the territory of the villages of Reşca (Dobrosloveni Commune, Olt County), respectively Hotărani (Fărcașele commune, Olt County). The resources of plastic clay for ceramic materials, the presence of springs from the terrace of the Teslui brook, of the gravel from the geological layer and, probably, of the forests, favoured the positioning in this place of the largest Roman urban settlements between the Carpathians and the Lower Danube. The territory of the archaeological site of Reș
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Erickson-Gini, Tali. "Problems and solutions in dating Nabataean pottery of the post-annexation period." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean, no. 30/2 (December 31, 2021): 681–706. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.2083-537x.pam30.2.01.

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In the desert regions of the Southern Levant, the dating of Nabataean sherds and vessels is a critical factor in determining the dates of archaeological strata, architecture, and even entire sites. In recent years, archaeologists working at Petra and related sites have tended to date most Nabataean sherds and vessels to the 1st century CE based on the proposed typo-chronology of the Swiss–Liechtenstein excavations at al-Zantur in Petra, published by Stephan G. Schmid (2000). Accepted typo-chronologies must withstand scrutiny and can override imposed historical frameworks. However, an uncritica
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Khanipour, Morteza. "EMERGENCE OF NEOLITHIC IN THE SOUTHERN PLAINS OF IRAN: DARAB PLAIN." History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Caucasus 21, no. 1 (2025): 74–92. https://doi.org/10.32653/ch21174-92.

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The study of the Neolithic period in Southwest Asia, particularly the Zagros region, has been a central focus for archaeologists. However, while central Zagros has been extensively researched, the southern plains and valleys remained largely unexplored until approximately a decade ago. The diverse environmental characteristics of Fars province necessitated more detailed studies of each region. The current study focuses on the southern Zagros region to further investigate the Neolithic period. In 2019, the first survey season was conducted in Darab to identify archaeological settlements. A tota
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Renel, François. "Roman pottery from the Building C4 pantry in the Qasr al-Bint area of Petra." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean, no. 30/2 (December 31, 2021): 629–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.31338/uw.2083-537x.pam30.2.05.

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The remains of a Nabataean private complex located west of the Roman-period apsidal building in the Qasr al-Bint area of Petra, excavated by the French archaeological team between 2005 and 2008, turned out to be reused by squatters during the Roman period. This occupation phase, one of the latest in this complex, was of a domestic nature, characterized by the installation of ovens (tawabeen) and other fireplaces, as well as the installation of a channel in the courtyard. The large assemblage of well preserved, often complete pottery vessels from the corresponding levels was dated by coins and
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Tikhomirov, K. N., and M. N. Tikhomirova. "New Data on Pottery of the Modern Period and Contemporary History from Tatar Settlements of the North of the Omsk Irtysh Region." Problems of Archaeology, Ethnography, Anthropology of Siberia and Neighboring Territories 30 (2024): 787–94. https://doi.org/10.17746/2658-6193.2024.30.0787-0794.

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The article is based on field archaeological materials obtained during the study of cultural layers of the existing settlements in the Ust-Ishim district of the Omsk Region. It examines pottery collections from the village of Ashevany and the village of UstIshim. The materials are divided into pottery (coarse) ceramics (molded and easel), and two types of fine pottery. The total number of coarse (pottery) ceramics is 17 items, while fine pottery is represented by 53 items. The most valuable finds are described. They basically belong to the first type of fine ceramics. This is a type of low-qua
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Mocanu, Marian. "A tableware group from the Hinterland of Ibida-Slava Rusă (Northeastern Moesia Inferior)." Peuce Serie Nouă, no. 20 (2022): 93–112. https://doi.org/10.62781/peucesn.20.04.

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In the summer of 2010, an archaeological survey took place in the village of Slava Rusă on the Harasimov property, located about 1.2 km southeast of the late Roman fortress. As a result of this archaeological excavation, a deposit was explored from which numerous artifacts from the Early Roman Period were recovered. Among the discovered objects there are also 54 ceramic fragments, which can be typologically classified as tableware. The ceramic group was divided into two categories: closed forms (for drinking) and open forms (for food consumption). Geographically, all the studied pottery fragme
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Kasiński, Michał, Jan Bulas, and Magdalena Okońska. "A newly discovered Przeworsk culture settlement and burial ground from the Late Pre-Roman and Roman period at Bejsce, Dist. Kazimierza Wielka – preliminary results of field-walking survey and rescue excavation." Recherches Archéologique Nouvelle Serie 10 (December 31, 2019): 231–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.33547/rechacrac.ns10.08.

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The article presents preliminary results of surface survey conducted under the leadership of the authors of this paper in spring of 2019 on multicultural complex of sites occupying a hill located in south-western part of Bejsce, Dist. Kazimierza Wielka. Among discovered finds the most numerous were the pottery fragments attributed to the Przeworsk culture dated to the Late Pre-Roman period, Roman period and early phase of Migration period. Settlement or possibly complex of settlements of the Przeworsk culture covered the southern part of the surveyed terrain form, while approximately 300 m to
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Eriksson, Thomas. "Gotlandic pottery outside Gotland." Światowit 57 (December 17, 2019): 101–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.6800.

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The article discusses contacts and networks along the eastern coast of Sweden and around the Baltic Sea. The focus is on the decorated pottery c. 0–700 AD. Sweden and Scandinavia had different regional styles of pottery during this period. One of the most distinctive Scandinavian styles is found on Öland and Gotland. This style is distinguished by the elaborate use of stamps and vessels with handles positioned from the rim to the shoulder. Vessels made in this style are found outside the large islands, notably in Svealand, i.e. the lake Mälaren Basin in central Sweden, as well as in northern S
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Mustață, Silvia. "Coarse ware jugs in funerary context: technical and functional observations on the pottery from the cemeteries at Alburnus Maior." Cercetări Arheologice 30, no. 1 (2023): 145–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.46535/ca.30.1.08.

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This study analyses a specific category of Roman ceramic vessels identified in the funerary inventories from Alburnus Maior: 26 coarse ware jugs present in the graves from the cemeteries at Tăul Corna, Tăul Găuri – Hop, Tăul Secuilor/Pârâul Porcului and in the area of the circular funerary monument. They all share specific morphological and technological characteristics, and at least a part of them are imitations in ceramic of bronze vessels. From a functional point of view they can be framed in the category of cooking ware and were produced from coarse fabrics. The vessels were produced local
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Ford, L. A., A. M. Pollard, R. A. E. Coningham, and B. Stern. "A geochemical investigation of the origin of Rouletted and other related South Asian fine wares." Antiquity 79, no. 306 (2005): 909–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00115030.

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Pottery of the Rouletted ware family belongs to India’s Early Historic period (c. 500 BC to c. AD 200) and has been found as far east as Bali in Indonesia and as far west as Berenike in Egypt. Although they appear similar to Mediterranean products, scientific tests by the authors show that Rouletted ware Arikamedu Type 10 and Sri Lankan Grey ware had a common geological origin in India. Since Grey ware at least pre-dates the arrival of Roman pottery in India, all these related wares were probably the products of indigenous communities.
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N., Abdel Rahim. "ANALYTICAL STUDY OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL POTTERY SARCOPHAGUS,GRECO ROMAN PERIOD, FROM SAQQARA, EGYPT." Egyptian Journal of Archaeological and Restoration Studies 5, no. 2 (2015): 79–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/ejars.2015.6851.

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Stark, Barbara L., Robert J. Speakman, and Michael D. Glascock. "Inter-Regional and Intra-Regional Scale Compositional Variability in Pottery from South-Central Veracruz, Mexico." Latin American Antiquity 18, no. 1 (2007): 59–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25063086.

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Both long-distance and localized chemical relationships in pottery and their implications for studies of Gulf lowland exchange can be examined with instrumental neutron activation. New pottery samples from Classic period (A.D. 300-900) contexts in the western lower Papaloapan basin were subjected to chemical compositional analysis. The sample represents three groups, coarse utility jars, common orange slipped serving bowls, and fine paste, higher-value white slipped serving bowls. At an intraregional scale, four localities in the western basin were sampled, but not all proved to be composition
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Welc, Fabian, Radosław Mieszkowski, Goranka Lipovac Vrkljan, and Ana Konestra. "An Attempt to Integration of Different Geophysical Methods (Magnetic, GPR and ERT); A Case Study From the Late Roman Settlement On the Island of Rab in Croatia." Studia Quaternaria 34, no. 1 (2017): 47–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/squa-2017-0004.

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AbstractIn 2016 within the RED Project Roman Economy in Dalmatia: production, distribution and demand in the light of pottery workshops, 5 selected areas around the Podšilo Bay were geophysically surveyed. During the fieldworks in the Lopar protected area, located in the northeastern part of the Island of Rab a gradiometer, ground-penetrating radar (GPR) and electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) were used. The main aim of the project was to document presence of the Roman architecture in two areas of the bay’s hinterland as suggested earlier by finds of pottery and glass. Geophysical studies
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Johnston, Alan, Kathleen Slane, and Joanita Vroom. "KYTHERAFORTY YEARS ON: THE POTTERY FROM HISTORICAL KASTRI REVISITED." Annual of the British School at Athens 109 (August 22, 2014): 3–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068245413000117.

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We present a review of the post Bronze Age material excavated by Coldstream and Huxley at Kastri on Kythera, as part of the ongoing Kythera Island Project. In particular we refer to material not published in Coldstream and Huxley 1972. Greek material is largely confined to one deposit and dates to the period c.500 to 380bc. From the Roman period material is more plentiful; the two relevant strata are third and late sixth to seventh centuries, with some earlier Julio-Claudian pieces. While later Medieval pottery also is largely from one deposit, the entirety of it is presented, and amis en scèn
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Licheli, Vakhtang, Giorgi Gagoshidze, and Merab Kasradze. "Preliminary Report on Archaeological Excavations in Sophtades, Cyprus: Pre-Byzantine Pottery." Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 27, no. 2 (2021): 328–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700577-12341396.

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Abstract The article is devoted to the materials found during the excavations of St. George Church located in the southern part of Cyprus, near the village of Softades. In the cultural layers inside of this church, pottery belonging to the Roman period, Iron Age and Late Bronze Age has been discovered. It is discussed in this article.
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Hulin, Linda. "‘Marmaric’ wares: some preliminary remarks." Libyan Studies 30 (1999): 11–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900002752.

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AbstractThis paper presents some information on Libyan pottery from Marmarica, based on the results of recent fieldwork in the vicinity of Marsa Matruh and Zawiyet umm-el Rakham. The local coarsewares are hard to date, but some New Kingdom period sherds can be identified. In the Graeco-Roman periods shell-tempered wares are found, in the form of a bag-shaped jar, production of which continues until at least the 7th century AD, to judge from the association of some of these sherds with amphorae of Riley's type Late Roman 13.
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Popovici, Sabin, Iulia Răbîncă, Laurenţiu Comănescu, Valentin Voicilă, and Gavrilă Pălcău. "Surface researches on the valley of the Frăsinet river (Frăsinetul de Pădure village, Dobrosloveni commune, Olt County). I." Cercetări Arheologice 30, no. 2 (2023): 409–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.46535/ca.30.2.01.

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Archaeological researches developed on the Frăsinetului River valley, Dobrosloveni commune, in December 2021, revealed close up to a private lake, situated in the north-east of the Frăsinet village, a very rich area in archaeological remains. Here were discovered a lot of pottery fragments belonging of different prehistoric cultures, roman period and medieval age. Among these pottery fragments, we remark some fragments belonging to Vădastra culture with various types of decoration as: excision, incision, grooved types and pottery with incisions and Vinča points. Among Vădastra pottery discover
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Popovici, Sabin, Simona Lazăr, and Laurențiu Comănescu. "CERCETĂRI ARHEOLOGICE DE SUPRAFAȚĂ ÎN CÂMPIA ROMANAŢIULUI (I)." Arhivele Olteniei 37 (December 21, 2023): 21–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.59277/ao.37.02.

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Archaelogical researches developed on the Frăsinetului River Valley, Dobrosloveni commune, Olt county, in 2021, revealed close up to a private lake, situated in the north-east of the Frăsinet village, a very rich area in archaeological remains. Here were discovered a lot of pottery fragments belonging to different prehistoric periods, roman period and medieval age. Among these pottery fragments, we remark some fragments belonging to the Vădastra culture with various types of decorations as: excisions, incisions, grooved types and pottery with incisions and Vinča points. Among Vădastra pottery
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DeMaris, Richard. "Demeter in Roman Corinth: Local Development in a Mediterranean Religion." Numen 42, no. 2 (1995): 105–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1568527952598701.

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AbstractThis study constructs a history of Demeter worship in Corinth and its environs based on archaeological finds from the Demeter and Kore sanctuary on Acrocorinth and elsewhere in the Corinthia. These finds document the changing character of Demeter devotion from the Greek to Roman period. Demeter worship survived the Roman sacking of Corinth in 146 BCE, but the reemerging cult changed: Demeter's chthonic aspect became dominant in the Roman period. The earlier Greek emphasis on fertility, substantiated by votive pottery finds from the Classical and Hellenistic periods, gave way to funerar
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