Local earthenware associated with enslaved African populations in the Americas, variously called “Colono-Ware,” “Afro-CaribbeanWare.” “Yabbas,” and “Criollo ware,” has received considerable attention from researchers. What unifies this disparate group of ceramics is not method of manufacture, design and decoration, or even form and function but the association or potential association with African diaspora populations. The ceramics incorporate some skills and techniques possibly brought by African potters to the Americas, as well as skills reflecting European and Native American traditions, and local adaptations in form, function, and manufacture.Analogies linking African ceramic traditions to American industries have at times been employed...
For ceramics to be relevant in the Southern African Iron Age, archaeologists must broaden their theo...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Native Americans rarely adorned ceramic objects with glass beads...
Unlike many other goods in the eighteenth century, which were wholly imported from Great Britain or ...
The following study takes a preliminary step towards defining the range of physical and and formal a...
This unpublished symposium paper presents ideas on possible uses of colonoware inspired by ethnoarch...
The low fired earthenwares of eighteenth and nineteenth century Charleston and San Juan are associat...
This practice-led research in the field of handmade ceramics explores what Africa means and how it i...
This practice-led research in the field of handmade ceramics explores what Africa means and how it i...
Little is known of the mechanisms of internal trade in Jamaica, especially amongst the poorer segmen...
The ceramic assemblages from a British colonial settlement in Bluefields Bay, Jamaica, provide a uni...
Colonoware is a low fired pottery tradition concentrated in the southeastern United States. It has b...
As some of the most frequently recovered historic artifacts on domestic sites, common coarse earthen...
The position and part played by pottery in historical research in black Africa Historical research ...
This paper discusses Ghanaian clay practices and how their histories and some practices limit their ...
Ethnoarchaeology, the study of material culture in a living society by archaeologists, facilitates t...
For ceramics to be relevant in the Southern African Iron Age, archaeologists must broaden their theo...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Native Americans rarely adorned ceramic objects with glass beads...
Unlike many other goods in the eighteenth century, which were wholly imported from Great Britain or ...
The following study takes a preliminary step towards defining the range of physical and and formal a...
This unpublished symposium paper presents ideas on possible uses of colonoware inspired by ethnoarch...
The low fired earthenwares of eighteenth and nineteenth century Charleston and San Juan are associat...
This practice-led research in the field of handmade ceramics explores what Africa means and how it i...
This practice-led research in the field of handmade ceramics explores what Africa means and how it i...
Little is known of the mechanisms of internal trade in Jamaica, especially amongst the poorer segmen...
The ceramic assemblages from a British colonial settlement in Bluefields Bay, Jamaica, provide a uni...
Colonoware is a low fired pottery tradition concentrated in the southeastern United States. It has b...
As some of the most frequently recovered historic artifacts on domestic sites, common coarse earthen...
The position and part played by pottery in historical research in black Africa Historical research ...
This paper discusses Ghanaian clay practices and how their histories and some practices limit their ...
Ethnoarchaeology, the study of material culture in a living society by archaeologists, facilitates t...
For ceramics to be relevant in the Southern African Iron Age, archaeologists must broaden their theo...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Native Americans rarely adorned ceramic objects with glass beads...
Unlike many other goods in the eighteenth century, which were wholly imported from Great Britain or ...