© Equinox Publishing Ltd. Islamic archaeology in the Arabian Gulf has grown tremendously in recent years. However, a ceramic chronology for the Late Islamic Arabian Gulf has not yet been put forward. The present paper constitutes a first attempt at a refined periodization based on the occupational sequence of al-Ain, UAE. The study is based on the typological quantification of sherds from stratified excavations undertaken by the Historic Buildings and Landscapes Section of the Tourism and Culture Authority Abu Dhabi. It is broadly based on the methodology developed by Derek Kennet in his much-cited Sasanian and Islamic Pottery from Ras al-Khaimah (2004). The c. 13,500-sherd assemblage has been divided into six periods of thirty to seventy y...
This study examines rare historical photographs from Kuwait, dated from the 1950s through the 1970s....
© 2020 by the Southwestern Social Science Association Objective: The objective of the article is to ...
Tiling Theory studies how one might cover the plane with various shapes. Medieval Islamic artisans d...
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Rescue excavations associated with the adaptive reuse of a historic bui...
In this exercise in early modern Islamic archaeology, the authors make an intriguing link between pe...
The Al Ain Oases Mapping Project is a collaboration between the Abu Dhabi Tourism and Culture Author...
This paper presents a summary of the results of a study of four kiln sites of Julfar ware, a coarse ...
The archaeology of pre-Islamic South Arabia is still in its infancy. The field is ready for a cultur...
The Islamic world has a rich artistic tradition of creating highly geometric and symmetric ornamenta...
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the origin and evolution of the Islamic State (IS) with ...
Students of world history will be familiar with the Red Sea as a strategic communications corridor l...
With over 1700 km of coastline, the inhabitants of Oman have had a deep and enduring relationship wi...
The proposed paper entitled: The Al Bidiya Mosque in Fujairah: A Vessel Of Cultural and Religious He...
This paper studies the painted pottery traditions of first-millennium BC north-western Arabia and th...
The rapid development of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has encouraged a focus on the future rather ...
This study examines rare historical photographs from Kuwait, dated from the 1950s through the 1970s....
© 2020 by the Southwestern Social Science Association Objective: The objective of the article is to ...
Tiling Theory studies how one might cover the plane with various shapes. Medieval Islamic artisans d...
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Rescue excavations associated with the adaptive reuse of a historic bui...
In this exercise in early modern Islamic archaeology, the authors make an intriguing link between pe...
The Al Ain Oases Mapping Project is a collaboration between the Abu Dhabi Tourism and Culture Author...
This paper presents a summary of the results of a study of four kiln sites of Julfar ware, a coarse ...
The archaeology of pre-Islamic South Arabia is still in its infancy. The field is ready for a cultur...
The Islamic world has a rich artistic tradition of creating highly geometric and symmetric ornamenta...
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the origin and evolution of the Islamic State (IS) with ...
Students of world history will be familiar with the Red Sea as a strategic communications corridor l...
With over 1700 km of coastline, the inhabitants of Oman have had a deep and enduring relationship wi...
The proposed paper entitled: The Al Bidiya Mosque in Fujairah: A Vessel Of Cultural and Religious He...
This paper studies the painted pottery traditions of first-millennium BC north-western Arabia and th...
The rapid development of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) has encouraged a focus on the future rather ...
This study examines rare historical photographs from Kuwait, dated from the 1950s through the 1970s....
© 2020 by the Southwestern Social Science Association Objective: The objective of the article is to ...
Tiling Theory studies how one might cover the plane with various shapes. Medieval Islamic artisans d...