Abstract: This paper deals with an original and poorly known ceramic product: Basket Ware. It is characterized by its technique of molding the shape inside a basket, whose imprints remain visible on the outside surface of the vase. Basket Ware is found only in the Indo-Iranian borderlands, between the 5th millennium and the second half of the 3rd millennium BC. In what follows, we present a preliminary report on this ware, supported by data available in the literature and by recent excavation and survey data from Pakistani Makran. These allow us to provide a preliminary study of the shapes and of the building of the Basket Ware and to assess some hypotheses that have been proposed on the subject. This ceramic product, a craft tradition of l...
International audienceThis article presents an overview of ceramics found in Pakistani Makran (South...
International audienceIn an extension of my ethnological doctoral research on basketry in Brittany (...
Abstract. About Two Centuries after Islam appearance, Pottery Production in Islamic lands underwent ...
Abstract: This paper deals with an original and poorly known ceramic product: Basket Ware. It is cha...
The earliest indirect evidence of basketry through clay impressions extends back to about 11,000 yea...
International audienceCeramics play an essential role in the knowledge of the protohistoric cultures...
The study of plaster vessels, white ware, from the Late Neolithic Southwest Asia (7000–5000 cal BC) ...
Twenty-five years ago, Roland Besenval (CNRS-UMR 9993) began a new archaeological field research pro...
This thesis forms the first application of scientific analysis (thin section petrography, electron m...
Archaeological basketry is one of the ‘invisible’ types of material culture, which in South-east Eur...
A small clay pot from the Neolithic site of Ganj Dareh (Iran), dating to the 8th millennium В. С, is...
The emergence, at the end of the 4th millennium, and the development of ceramic production in Oman, ...
To reconstruct ceramic production technology in the Zagros region and to specify the pattern of tech...
Abstract : The ornementation on chlorite vases and objects recently discovered in the Jiroft area of...
International audienceThis article presents an overview of ceramics found in Pakistani Makran (South...
International audienceIn an extension of my ethnological doctoral research on basketry in Brittany (...
Abstract. About Two Centuries after Islam appearance, Pottery Production in Islamic lands underwent ...
Abstract: This paper deals with an original and poorly known ceramic product: Basket Ware. It is cha...
The earliest indirect evidence of basketry through clay impressions extends back to about 11,000 yea...
International audienceCeramics play an essential role in the knowledge of the protohistoric cultures...
The study of plaster vessels, white ware, from the Late Neolithic Southwest Asia (7000–5000 cal BC) ...
Twenty-five years ago, Roland Besenval (CNRS-UMR 9993) began a new archaeological field research pro...
This thesis forms the first application of scientific analysis (thin section petrography, electron m...
Archaeological basketry is one of the ‘invisible’ types of material culture, which in South-east Eur...
A small clay pot from the Neolithic site of Ganj Dareh (Iran), dating to the 8th millennium В. С, is...
The emergence, at the end of the 4th millennium, and the development of ceramic production in Oman, ...
To reconstruct ceramic production technology in the Zagros region and to specify the pattern of tech...
Abstract : The ornementation on chlorite vases and objects recently discovered in the Jiroft area of...
International audienceThis article presents an overview of ceramics found in Pakistani Makran (South...
International audienceIn an extension of my ethnological doctoral research on basketry in Brittany (...
Abstract. About Two Centuries after Islam appearance, Pottery Production in Islamic lands underwent ...