The dissertation examines wheel-shaped ceramics found in archaeological sites on the territory of Lithuania, dating from the 10th to the 13th century. These wheel-shaped ceramics, along with imitated wheel-shaped ceramics, exhibit various technological and stylistic features that correspond to the nature of so called Slavic/Baltic/medieval ceramics widely spread in broader European regions. Using the numerous collections of household vessels and their fragments stored in various Lithuanian museums, which were collected during archaeological investigations in the period in question on hillforts, settlements, and burial monuments, the thesis aims to create spatially and chronologically significant typological systems. It also intends to evalu...