© 2020, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature. This study investigates how the technology of Coptic Glazed Ware (CGW) – which is one of the earliest examples of Islamic glazed pottery – was developed, allowing for an insight into the mechanisms that contributed to the making of early Islamic material culture. The range of technologies of 20 CGW samples recovered from different sites in Israel was reconstructed, based on the characterisations by thin-section petrography, optical microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy energy-dispersive spectrometry. Our results show that the samples were originated from Aswan, Egypt. The procurement of kaolinitic clay from local deposits to form the ceramic body and slip, as well as the ...
A number of recent publications have shown that a small amount of Egyptian glazed table wares were i...
A small group of opaque yellow glazed sherds has recently been identified among the ceramics excavat...
This paper studies the painted pottery traditions of first-millennium BC north-western Arabia and th...
The beginnings of Islamic ceramics have long been attributed to the opaque white glazed wares made ...
The generally accepted theory is that the demand for Islamic glazed pottery started in Abbasid Iraq ...
A representative selection of glazed ceramics recovered from medieval Islamic contexts excavated in ...
It has been generally accepted that the beginnings of tin-based opacification of ceramic glazes is a...
Jerash in northern Jordan was, despite a focus on its classical heritage, also active in the Middle ...
This is a pre-print of an article published in Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. The fina...
In this article we will examine a series of problems that emerged during two systematic campaigns of...
In this paper, the monochrome glazed Bahlā Ware from al-Ain dated between the seventeenth and twenti...
International audienceThe first centuries of Islamic civilization were characterized by major techno...
This study centred on the analysis of ten pottery sherds from the collections of the Islamic Museum ...
The production of polychrome decorated ceramics began in Ifriqiya in the 9th century under Aghlabid ...
The aim of this work was to study the chemical and micro-structural composition of Ayyubid/Mamluk gl...
A number of recent publications have shown that a small amount of Egyptian glazed table wares were i...
A small group of opaque yellow glazed sherds has recently been identified among the ceramics excavat...
This paper studies the painted pottery traditions of first-millennium BC north-western Arabia and th...
The beginnings of Islamic ceramics have long been attributed to the opaque white glazed wares made ...
The generally accepted theory is that the demand for Islamic glazed pottery started in Abbasid Iraq ...
A representative selection of glazed ceramics recovered from medieval Islamic contexts excavated in ...
It has been generally accepted that the beginnings of tin-based opacification of ceramic glazes is a...
Jerash in northern Jordan was, despite a focus on its classical heritage, also active in the Middle ...
This is a pre-print of an article published in Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. The fina...
In this article we will examine a series of problems that emerged during two systematic campaigns of...
In this paper, the monochrome glazed Bahlā Ware from al-Ain dated between the seventeenth and twenti...
International audienceThe first centuries of Islamic civilization were characterized by major techno...
This study centred on the analysis of ten pottery sherds from the collections of the Islamic Museum ...
The production of polychrome decorated ceramics began in Ifriqiya in the 9th century under Aghlabid ...
The aim of this work was to study the chemical and micro-structural composition of Ayyubid/Mamluk gl...
A number of recent publications have shown that a small amount of Egyptian glazed table wares were i...
A small group of opaque yellow glazed sherds has recently been identified among the ceramics excavat...
This paper studies the painted pottery traditions of first-millennium BC north-western Arabia and th...