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    A Manual of Egyptian PotteryVolume : Second Intermediate PeriodLate Period

    AERA Field Manual Series

    by Anna WodziskaAncient Egypt Research Associates, Inc.

    Institute of Archaeology, University of Warsaw, Poland

    Ancient Egypt Research Associates, Inc.

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    Published by Ancient Egypt Research Associates, Inc. Lincoln Street, Suite , Boston,

    Ancient Egypt Research Associates () is a (c) (), tax-exempt,non-profit organization dedicated to research on Ancient Egypt at the

    Giza Plateau.

    by Ancient Egypt Research Associates

    Printed in Hollis, New Hampshire, at Puritan Press.Layout and design by Alexandra Witsell.

    All rights reserved. No part o this publication may be reproduced,stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any orm or by anymeans, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwisewithout the prior consent o the publisher.

    ISBN: ---- (sofcover binding)ISBN: ---- (spiral binding)

    SERIES EDITORS

    Wilma Wetterstrom

    and

    Alexandra Witsell

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    Contents

    List o Abbreviations Used in this Volume v

    Preace and Acknowledgments vii

    Map o Egyptian Find Sites or Pottery Illustrated in this Volume x

    . Pottery Production and Processing in the Field

    . Post-Excavation Studies

    . CeramicGlossary

    . Further Reading: a General Selection on Ceramics

    . Clay and Fabric Descriptions Used in Volume

    . Egyptian Pottery Second Intermediate Period

    New Kingdom

    Tird Intermediate Period

    Late Period

    . Further Reading: a Selection for Volume

    . Color Plates

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    List of Abbreviations Used in this Volume

    gyptologische Abhandlungen

    Archaeology & History in Lebanon

    American Research Center in Egypt

    Annales du Service des Antiquits de lgypte

    Archologische Verffentlichungen des Deutschen Archologischen Instituts, Abt. Kairo

    British Archaeological Reports, International Series

    Bulletin o the American Schools o Oriental Research

    Bulletin de liaison du groupe international dtude de la cramique gyptienne

    BdE Bibliotque dtude, Institut ranais darchologie orientale

    Bulletin o the Egyptological Seminar

    Bulletin de lInstitut ranais darchologie orientale British School o Archaeology in Egypt (and Egyptian Research Account)

    Studien zur Altgyptischen Kultur, Beihefe

    Cahiers de la cramique gyptienne

    Centre national de la recherche scientifique

    Egitto e Vicino Oriente

    Fouilles de lInstitut ranais darchologie orientale

    Gttinger Miszellen

    Institut ranais darchologie orientale

    Journal o the American Research Center in Egypt

    Journal o Archaeological Science

    Journal o Egyptian Archaeology

    Journal o Near Eastern Studies, University o Chicago

    Journal o the Society or the Study o Egyptian Antiquities

    Lexikon der gyptologie, Vols. (Wiesbaden)

    Mnchner gyptologische Studien

    Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archologischen Instituts, Abt. Kairo

    Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta

    Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean

    Studien zur Archologie und Geschichte Altgyptens

    Studien zur Altgyptischen Kultur

    Sonderschrifen des Deutschen Archologischen Instituts

    Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology

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    Society or the Study o Egyptian Antiquities

    Warsaw Egyptological Studies

    Zeitschrif r gyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde

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    Preface

    Ceramics are usually the most abundant artiacts present at Egyptian archaeological sites. Tey areofen ound in large quantities and their analysis requires great patience and due attention. Such

    analysis is generally time-consuming and sometimes simply boring. Te final result o ceramic study,

    however, can be very rewarding. Ceramics can offer a great deal o useul inormation. For example,they can date a site or its phases, and provide evidence or different activit ies and purposes o a site or itssmaller units. Ceramics sometimes indicate different routes o product exchange between various sitesor regions. For these reasons, all excavated pottery should be kept and stored or documentation andurther analysis beore the final publication o a site.

    Given the importance o ceramics, the subject was chosen to be part o the basic curriculum o thefirst Ancient Egypt Research Associates () Field School in spring , organized in conjunctionwith the American Research Center in Egypt (). Te main aim o the Field School, supervisedby Mohsen Kamel and Ana avares, was to train the official inspectors o the Supreme Council oAntiquities () in the excavation techniques o field archaeology, as well as in specialist studies o ma-

    terial culture and environmental analysis, such as ceramics, objects, auna, flora, and human osteology.In response to the success o the first Field School, Mark Lehner, director o , along with the FieldSchool teachers and the team, decided to organize an Advanced Field School in specializingin particular areas, such as excavation, illustration, and ceramics. As ceramicist, I taught potteryanalysis to these returning students. While I was preparing the course, Dr. Lehner suggested that I writean Field School Pottery Manual. At first the manual was to be a concise catalogue o ceramicsrom different periods o Egyptian archaeology. Over time, however, the manual expanded to includeadditional inormation related to material, manuacturing techniques, surace treatment, and context.Eventually, I compiled a large corpus o Egyptian ceramics rom all periods o Egyptian history, romNeolithic to Modern times. I also added brie discussions o certain imported vessels to remind archae-ologists that pottery rom Egyptian sites ofen includes pieces brought in rom other regions, and is,thereore, not always homogenous.

    Te final product, thisManual o Egyptian Pottery, is divided into our volumes:

    Volume Egyptian Neolithic Fayum , Merimde, Omari, Badari, Naqada , Naqada , and theLower Egyptian Culture

    Volume Naqada , Archaic Period, Old Kingdom, First Intermediate Period, and MiddleKingdom

    Volume Second Intermediate Period, New Kingdom, Tird Intermediate Period, and LatePeriod

    Volume Ptolemaic Period, Early and Late Roman Periods, Medieval, and Modern times

    Each o the volumes consists o eight sections (the first five o which repeat in each volume):

    Section General inormation on pottery production in Egypt and methods o potteryrecording in the field

    Section Post-excavation procedures leading to the publication o the material

    NOE: Afer the publication o Volumes and , the introductory texts in Volumes and o theManual

    were modified ollowing the very kind suggestions o Hans-ke Nordstrm, Pamela Rose, and Alison Gascoigne.

    Future editions o Volume will include these same modifications.

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    Section A list o terms and abbreviations related to ceramics

    Section A selected bibliography concerning technological aspects o Egyptian pottery

    Section Descriptions o the clays mentioned in the text

    Section Te pottery rom all Egyptian periods, organized chronologically:

    Each subsection, treating each o the periods, consists o two parts: ) an introduction to thepottery, describing its general trends, and ) a catalogue o the main ceramic types, organizednot according to a detailed chronological order, but, rather, by shape (restricted ollowed byunrestricted vessels).

    Each ceramic type is illustrated with a drawing, accompanied by a short description withthe general name o the find site (e.g., Giza, Abydos). More specific inormation about theprovenience is provided by the reerence cited or each drawing. Te shape, material(according to the original publication and in relation to the Vienna System i possible),surace treatment, publication, and other inormation pertinent to dating are provided.Additional remarks and bibliography are sometimes included. Te vessel description is basedonly on the text rom the original publications. I inormation was not presented in the

    original text, it is labeled as not stated.

    Section A selection o reerences related to the particular ceramics described in the volume.

    Section Color plates, including a selection o photographs o ceramics rom differentperiods. For Volume , in addition to the color photos o the Medieval pottery, there are alsocolor drawings. Te Medieval glazed ceramics are usually very colorul. As it is very difficult toillustrate their precise hues, the colors are approximate.

    Tis manual was originally meant to be a quick field guide or the Egyptian inspectors asthey recovered pottery in the course o their own excavations, especially because many may not haveregular access to libraries. It is essentially an illustrated list o ceramic types rom different periods,meant to show only the most general trends in Egyptian ceramics. Drawings and photographs o pot-tery or the manual were selected to show those general types most characteristic o the different peri-ods. For this purpose a kind o typology o Egyptian ceramics was created based on the ceramic ormsthemselves, rather than the typologies presented in the publications on specific sites. However, the de-scriptions here come rom the original publications rom which I drew my types. Most o the language isthat o the reerence cited. As the task o describing a ceramic vessel is highly subjective, each researchermay describe pots in somewhat different ways. Hence the terminology, such as or vessel shape (plate,bowl, ewer, dish, bottle, etc.), is not entirely uniorm or consistent throughout this volume. Nor are all

    vessels described in the same detail. In addition, the user may not find in the manual every single vesselrom each period. Further editions o the book may expand to include more comprehensive typologies.

    It was not my intention to document shape changes o any given type over time, nor to indicate regionalvariations within periods, although such spatial differences are observed in the archaeological material.Indeed, the division o ceramic material into historical periods is rather artificial, since many typeswere in use longer than a single period. I am ully aware that my pottery manual does not address everyquestion related to Egyptian pottery but I hope it will be a useul resource or archaeologists working inEgypt. As a specialist in Old Kingdom pottery mysel, I am grateul or any comments and suggestionsconcerning ceramics rom other periods.

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    Acknowledgments

    Our excavations at Giza are part o the work o Ancient Egypt Research Associates (), directedby Dr. Mark Lehner. I would like to thank a number o oundations and individuals or their

    financial support o the excavations and analysis. Some o these are the Ann and Robert H. Lurie

    Foundation, the David H. Koch Foundation, the Charles Simonyi Fund or Arts and Sciences, ed WaittFamily Foundation, Peter Norton Family Foundation, Glen Dash Foundation, Marjorie Fisher, Ed andKathy Fries, J. Michael and Marybeth Johnston, Jason G. Jones and Emily E. renkner-Jones, Bruce andCarolyn Ludwig, David Marguiles, and Ann Tompson. I would also like to thank Dr. Zahi Hawass andEgypts Supreme Council o Antiquities, along with all o my Egyptian colleagues. Tis work would nothave been possible without the tireless efforts o Dr. Lehner to create and finance an exemplary researchand education program at Giza, Egypt.

    Te present manual is a result o cooperation between numerous individuals and institutions. FirstI would like to again thank Dr. Lehner or his idea o creating the manual and publishing it as an publication.

    My deepest appreciation goes to Wilma Wetterstrom and Cindy Sebrell who are responsible or thepresent shape o the book. I would like to express my special gratitude to Alexandra Witsell who pre-pared the book layout. It required a lot o skill, perseverance, and patience, especially in the case o mymultiple changes and rewritings during the course o the work. Tank you, Ali.

    Mary Anne Murray, Richard Redding, Janine Bourriau, and eodozja I. Rzeuska were also alwaysready to give me very useul advice.

    I would like to express my particular indebtedness to Hans-ke Nordstrm, Pamela Rose, and AlisonGascoigne or their kind and insightul reviews o Volumes and o the manual.

    Drawings used in the manual were prepared by Edyta Klimaszewska-Drabot, Mariola Orzechowska,and mysel. Te collection o color photos was compiled rom photographs provided by the ollowingindividuals and projects:

    Krzyszto Ciaowicz, Mariusz Jucha: photographs o the pottery rom ell el Farkha;

    Harco Willems, Marleen De Meyer, and Steanie Vereecken in particular: photographs rom theDayr al-Barsha Project;

    onny de Wit, Willeke Wendrich: photographs rom the Fayum;

    Wodzimierz Godlewski: Late Roman and Medieval pottery photographs rom Naqlun monasteryin Fayum;

    Yukinori Kawae: photographs o the ceramics rom Giza and el Nazla village;

    Mariola Orzechowska: New Kingdom pottery photos rom Giza;

    eodozja I. Rzeuska, Dietrich Raue: photographs rom Elephantine.

    I also would like to thank Sawomir Rzepka or the permission to use the ceramic photos taken bymysel at ell el Retaba. Te majority o photographs came rom the Petrie Museum thanks to StephenQuirke and Richard Langley. I am deeply grateul or their help.

    And last but not least I would like to express my gratitude to employees o the Institute o Egyptologyin Prague, especially Jaromr Krej, or the opportunity to use their Egyptological l ibrary. My researchin Prague was financed by the Department o Egyptian and Nubian Archaeology o the Institute oArchaeology (the University o Warsaw, Poland), thanks to its head, Pro. Wodzimierz Godlewski. Iam very grateul or his trust in my work.

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    Map illustrating location of Egyptian sites mentioned in Volume .

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    Pottery Production and Processing in the Field

    Please see Ceramic Glossary, pages , or definitions o terms.

    Pottery retrieved rom archaeological excavations can be processed in many ways (e.g., Orton, yers,and Vince , Rice ). Over several years, I have developed a system that works well or thespecific case o the ceramics rom the excavations at the Heit el-Ghurab site at Giza (also knownas the Lost City o the Pyramids). Te same system, slightly modified, can be used at other sites.

    Te bags o pottery collected rom the excavation are sent to the lab or processing. All pottery rag-ments rom the site are first sorted into two groups: ) diagnostic: those rom which the original orm othe whole vessel can be deduced (i.e., complete pots, complete profiles, parts o rims, parts o bases), aswell as sherds with decoration and ragments with potmarks; and ) non-diagnostic ragments.

    Diagnostic ragments are classified according to the ypology and then recorded on Pottery Forms. For an example o an Pottery Form, which consists o several descriptive cat-egories, see able (page ). Te non-diagnostics are sorted according to two types: pieces that belongto bread-molds, and other non-diagnostic types that are not parts o bread-molds. Tese are weighed

    separately, their weights are recorded on the Pottery Form, and the sherds are discarded.Pots slated or drawing (rendered at a scale o :) are segregated and stored separately (or potterydrawing techniques, see Becker , Joyce and Dillon ). In addition to drawings, pots are docu-mented with two sets o photos. One captures complete vessels, significant shapes, pots with decoration,and potmarks. Te second shows the clay in the breaks o the pottery wall. Te tools used or potteryprocessing, drawing, and photography are listed in able (page ).

    All inormation about pottery rom the site is stored in a digital database. Tis greatly acilitates thedata analyses, especially in the case o a very large assemblage. Te more data we collect, the more rela-tions between data we create in the database, and the more relations we have, the better the material isdescribed. All the ceramics data rom excavations are stored in the Pottery Database in theormat presented in able (page ).

    Clay and Fabric (Aston : , Bourriau and Nordstrm )All ceramics are made o clay. Natural Egyptian clays that ormed under different conditions arecharacterized by different compositions. Clays originating rom limestone characterized by calciumcarbonate are called marls. Nile clays, also called Nile alluvium or Nile silt, are composed o particlescarried by Nile waters and usually consist o large amounts o silica. Kaolin clays are ormed o kaolinite,a mineral associated with granite rocks located in the Aswan area. Pliocene clays ormed during thePliocene period and can be ound in the oases, especially in Kharga Oasis. Naturally occurring clays canbe mixed by the potter seeking a particular combination o clay properties.

    Te most common Egyptian clays are Nile alluvium and marl. Nile alluvium contains greater amounts

    o silica and can be fired at lower temperatures, around to . Te surace afer firing is usuallydark red or brown. Te break o a pottery wall shows different color layers: red/brown with a black core.Nile clay used in pottery production ofen contains organic inclusions (small ragments o grass, chaff,dung, ash, etc.), or material introduced to the raw clay by the potter as temper. Marls are fired at highertemperatures, between and . Te clay shown in the break is very homogenous and dense. Tecolor o suraces is generally beige, pink, or very light yellow. Marl clay is very hard afer firing. Marl potsusually do not contain any organic material.

    Nile and marl clay can be urther divided into subgroups according to inclusions, hardness, anddensity. Te Vienna System (Bourriau and Nordstrm : ) classifies the abrics o Ancient

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    Egyptian pottery. Te term abric reers to the physical composition and properties o the clay and itsinclusions, both naturally occurring and/or added by a potter.

    Clay or manuacturing pots has to be properly prepared. Te raw material contains inclusions thatcan damage the pot wall during shaping or later firing, and thus must be removed prior to working. Teclay is prepared by levigating it. Te raw clay is mixed with water and allowed to rest in special pools,where the coarser particles sink to the bottom. Te clay is then kneaded until the mass is smooth. Tis

    process can take days or sometimes months beore the clay is ready or shaping into a vessel.

    Clay Fabric Designation and Classification (Aston : , Bourriau and Nordstrm ,Rice )Pots are made o materials that can be characterized by various properties: the origin o the clay, thepresence or absence o inclusions, porosity, hardness, color, and firing temperature.

    Inclusions are particles present in the clay. Tey may be present in the natural material when takenrom the source or may be added by the potter. In the latter case, these inclusions are called temper.Inclusions can also vary in shape, size, and requency, and are classified as organic or non-organic.Examples o organic particles are straw, chaff, dung, and ash. Tese ofen burn away during the firing

    process, but leave voids in the clay that show characteristic impressions. Examples o non-organic inclu-sions are sand and ragments o rock, such as limestone, basalt, and granite.Color is another important component o the clay and abric description. It can help to identiy the

    clay and to determine the conditions under which the clay was fired. Color is ofen described using theterminology o established color charts. One o most popular is the Munsell soil color chart.

    Clay can also be described in terms o its porosity. Porosity is determined by measuring the densityo pores. Tese are the empty spaces in the abric that are ormed during the firing process.

    Te hardness o clays is very ofen measured using the Mohs scale. Te scale, with values rangingrom (the sofest) to (the hardest), is based on the relative hardness o standard minerals: talc, gypsum, calcite, fluorite apatite, orthoclase, quartz, topaz, sapphire, and diamond. Hardness is determined with successive scratch tests. I a mineral leaves a mark on aceramic, the ceramic is sofer. I both can scratch each other, they are o equal hardness. Te Mohs scalecan also be supplemented with other materials o known hardness: . i the ceramic can be scratchedby a fingernail, copper wire, . window glass, . the blade o a pocket knie.

    aking into consideration different criteria or clay description, we prepare a clay abric classifica-tion. Te Vienna System, mentioned above, is one o the best known abric classification systems. Itdoes not encompass all abrics used in producing Egyptian pottery, but it can be a good reerence andstandard or ceramics rom any one particular site. For example, although the settlement (the Heitel-Ghurab site) has its own clay classification system, it includes clay equivalencies in the wider ViennaSystem in order to make it more amiliar to the larger ceramic audience (Wodziska : ,able .).

    Shaping Methods (Arnold and Bourriau , Hope )Tere are a number o methods or shaping pots: hand-shaping, hand-shaping and finishing with aturning device, or shaping on a wheel. Hand-shaping methods include: ) orming a single piece o clayby the use o reehand shaping, ) shaping with a paddle and anvil, or a paddle and the ground, ) shap-ing on a core or over a hump, ) shaping with a mold, and ) building with a slab/coil.

    Te simplest shaping method is to orm a vessel reehand rom a single piece o clay without usingany tools. Pots made this way are usually open with walls o irregular thickness. Te paddle-and-anvilmethod employs a paddle, usually a flat piece o wood, to shape clay against an anvil, usually a hemi-spherical hole in the ground. Vessels made with the paddle-and-anvil have spherical or hemispherical

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    bodies. Another simple method is to shape the vessel on a core or over a hump. A core can be a ceramicpot, the shape o which can be duplicated. A hump can be made o wood or stone. In both cases, theinternal surace o the new pot will resemble the external surace o the core or hump. Similarly, a potcan be made in a mold. Its external surace will resemble the internal surace o the mold, which canbe another pot, usually an open orm. Another simple hand-shaping technique is slab/coil shaping. Tepotter orms a coil o clay and lays it down in a spiral ashion in order to build a vessel. Te use o a

    turning device can help make pots with more regular shapes. However, the most advanced method iswith a wheel. A potters wheel with a stable central axis makes it possible to create regular orms withrelatively thin walls.

    Surface TreatmentTe suraces o ancient Egyptian pots were treated in various ways. Te most common method consistedo simple smoothing prior to firing. Te potter smoothed pots using hands or special tools, such as amodified pottery sherd, a ragment o wood, or a pebble. Te smoothed surace could also be coated andsubsequently burnished or polished. Burnishing is a process o refining the surace with the use o a hardtool, commonly a pebble. A burnished surace is characterized by the presence o shiny stripes. Polishing

    requires sof materials such as abric or ur. Te resulting surace shines without visible borders.When a coat is applied to the surace beore firing it is called a slip, while a wash designates a coatapplied afer firing (Rice : ). In addition, vessels may be glazed, especially in the case o Medievalpottery.

    DecorationWe can distinguish several kinds o decoration: painted (beore or afer firing), incised (beore or aferfiring), impressed (beore firing), stamped (beore firing), applied (beore firing), molded (beore firing),and cut-out (beore firing).

    Te Ancient Egyptian potter, or in many cases an artist, decorated pots with several colors o paint.Te most common colors were generally white, red, black, and, in some cases, yellow and blue. Colorscan help in dating a pot. For example, blue was characteristic o certain ceramic vessels rom the NewKingdom.

    Te surace o a pot could be incised or impressed. Te thickness o incised lines or dots depends onthe tool used. Tick irregular marks could be made with fingers. More detailed motis could be executedwith tools made o wood, bone, or reed.

    Impressed decorations are made with a variety o different materials. Te surace o a pot may beartraces o abric or string. Stamped decoration is made using stamps in the shape o a palmette, rosette,cross, etc.

    Small decorative pieces o clay, the same consistency as that used or the walls, can be applied to thesurace beore firing. Tis is simplest orm o application or applique. However, clay can also be thinned

    with water to achieve the consistencies necessary or different types o decorative techniques. A potteryvessel can be covered with a type o watered-down clay applied by cutting a small hole in a bag andsqueezing a small, delicate rope o watery clay in decorative patterns. Again, this is done beore firing.Tis type o decoration is called barbotine.

    Te walls o pots made in molds bear relie decoration executed in the mold. Te most characteristicpots with molded decoration belong to the Roman terra sigillatatradition.

    Some Egyptian pots, especially large stands, have holes in the walls made beore firing while the claycontains enough water to be carved. Tis is reerred to as the cut-out method.

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    Shape Designation(Rice : )All pots can be divided into two groups: Restricted and Unrestricted vessels. Te rim diameter o arestricted vessel is smaller than the maximum diameter o its body, whereas that o an unrestricted

    vessel is greater than, or equal to, the maximum diameter o its body. Tese groups can be urtherdivided into ormal groups: Restricted vessels:

    Jars (restricted vessel with neck, the height is greater that its maximum diameter) Unrestricted vessels:

    Bowls (unrestricted vessel with base) Stands (unrestricted vessel without base and with two rims)

    A restricted pot shape can also be described as hole-mouthed, meaning that the jar has a rim thatcurves inward.

    A vessel consists o three components: rim, body, and base (figure ).

    Figure . Basic vessel parts (partly based on Shepard : , Figure ).

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    Te shape o the body can be described using terms or geometric shapes: sphere, ellipsoid, ovaloid,cylinder, hyperboloid, and cone (figure ).

    Figure . Vessel shape descriptions derived from geometric figure names (based on Rice : , Figure .).

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    Figure . Different base shapes.

    Figure . Terminology for describing rim forms.

    Te bases o most Egyptian pots are round, but they can also be flat, slightly flat, or pointed. Tereare also ring bases (figure ). Te rims can be pointed, round, flat, or recurved (figure ).

    RIM

    ORIENTATION

    RIM SHAPE

    pointed

    rims

    flat

    rims

    rounded

    rims

    recurved

    rims

    straight

    rims

    flaring

    rims

    narrowing

    rims

    can also

    be called

    modeled rims

    can also

    be called

    unmodeled rims

    can also be

    called direct

    rims

    can also be called

    indirect rims

    Rounded base Slightly flat base Pointed base Flat base Ring base

    Rims can be described in a variety o ways by different ceramicists based on rim orientation andshape, much like the shape o bases (figure ). erms that are used to describe orientation are basedon the directionality o the walls and rim (such as straight,flaring, ornarrowing), with directusuallyindicating a vertical stance to the rim and walls, and indirectusually reerring to a flaring or narrow-

    ing stance. However, these are not standard terms accepted by all ceramicists; everyone describes potsslightly differently. When describing the actual shape o the rim itsel, the terminology reers to thegeometric shape o the rim or the intention o the potter. For example, geometric shapes can bepointed,flat,round, or recurved.Further, i the potter intended or the rim to be simple, with only a slight pointor flat on top, it might be called unmodeled. I the potter put extra work into finishing the rim by round-ing or recurving, it might be called a modeledrim.

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    Figure . Example of a typology of jars. (Since many of the vessels could not be completely reconstructed for

    lack of bases, complete profiles, etc., the typology employs only rims and necks).

    TypologyAfer examining a collection o pots, we sort them into types based on a number o shared traits. Tetraits include a combination o production method, shape, clay, and surace treatment. In this way wecreate a typology, or a classification, o all pottery rom the site into types. Figure shows a sample o a

    jar typology.

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    Date: iii Bag number:

    Context: -S/ Processor: AW

    Non diag. weight: . F non diag. weight: .

    Pot

    number

    ype Fabric

    (clay,

    surfacetreatment)

    Part of vessel,

    diameter - cm

    Percent Count Weight - kg Remarks (presence of

    potmarks, traces ofvessel usage, etc.)

    AB GN, WWh R, . Potmarkexternal

    surace, afer firing

    CD GN, WWh R, . -

    F GN R, . Burned rim

    Data base entry: AW Page:

    Table . Example of an AERA Pottery Form.

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    POERY PROCESSING DRAWINGS PHOOS

    Handbookor any additionalremarks on the described material

    Contour gauge, caliper Camera

    Hand lens, min. x magnificationused during clay (abric)description and identification

    Long ruler, triangles Photo backgroundorexample, a piece o abric orpaper

    Scalesor weighing Pencil Photo scale

    Glueused during reconstruction obroken pots

    racing paper, Grid paper

    Pen with black water-proo inkormarking the sherds

    Pencil eraser

    Munsell color charts Circles or measuring diameter

    Table . Basic pottery processing tools.

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    CAEGORY DESCRIPION

    Number of pot Follows the number assigned to every diagnostic ragment

    Drawing Drawing prepared, name o drafsperson

    Photo Photo taken, photo numberContext Area, grid, square, eature number, eature type, building, etc.

    Year Year o excavation

    ype According to the site typology

    Variants Variants o types

    Vessel part R rim, B base, W wall (body sherd), Cpr complete profile, Cpot complete pot, H handle, O object made o ceramic

    Count Quantity o sherds/pots

    Percent Percentage o pot, rim, base preserved

    Height PH preserved height, CH complete height, L length, in centimeters(cm)

    Rim diameter Measured in centimeters (cm)

    Base diameter Measured in centimeters (cm)

    Max diameter Maximum diameter o body o a vessel, in centimeters (cm)

    clay (fabric) According to the site clay description

    Hardness sof, middle (scratched with fingernail), hard (scratched withcopper wire), very hard (scratched with window glass)

    Method of production HM handmade, W wheel-turned, M molded, WM wheel-madeor HM-W handmade and later turned on a slow wheel

    Base shaping M molded, SC string cut, K knie cutBase surface treatment See surace treatment

    Break sections Colors o break sections

    Break porosity Open, medium, dense

    Surface treatment(outside and inside)

    Sm smoothed, P polished , U untreated, C slipped (beore firing),Wh washed (afer firing)

    Slip colors R red, O orange, Pi pink, Br brown, Bl black, W white

    Surface color Using the Munsell color charts

    Decoration(outside and inside)

    Painted, incised, applied, molded, etc.

    Wall thickness Measured in centimeters (cm)

    Weight Measured in kilograms (kg)

    Remarks Usually description o the state o surace preservation, traces o ancientusage

    Potmarks Marks made on the surace: types, made beore or afer firing, on externalor internal surace

    Storage Location where stored

    Table . General categories of the AERA Pottery Database.

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    Post-Excavation Studies

    The work afer excavation is the most time consuming part o pottery analysis. Te field work is verydemanding and usually pottery specialists do not have enough time or a detailed analysis o thematerial. During field work, however, the pottery is well documented in order to provide a basis or

    urther study. ime during the off-season is used or database entry, analysis o the data, and a studyo the results. Additionally, pencil drawings that were done during the field season are prepared orpublication; they are inked or redrawn in a computer graphics program. Te final and most importantstage o the pottery study is its publication. Te article or book should be a comprehensive account othe material, including all the inormation that is available.

    Pottery can be published in a variety o different ways. Te publication o a corpus o ceramics roma site begins with a qualitative description o the assemblage including the attributes discussed above.Te publication should include quantitative data as well, such as counts and percentages o each type.Finally it must also move beyond description to consider the ceramics in their archaeological context inorder to shed light on the pottery itsel as well as to inorm us about the ancient site.

    Considering the ceramics within the context o the site stratigraphy allows us to organize potteryaccording to the phases o site occupation. For a site with a long occupation and well defined phases it ispossible to trace the ceramics over time. Do the relative proportions o types change? Or do some typesdisappear or evolve into another type? Is the modification connected to the shapes or the technologyused to produce the pots? Is it related to the uses o the vessels?

    While the site phasing can be used to place the ceramics in a chronological sequence, pottery withalready well established dates based on other sites may help to date a site or area within a site.

    Te ceramic analysis should also contribute to an understanding o the archaeological site. Potterycan reflect activities and the unctions o an area such as cooking, bread baking, beer brewing, etc.omb and temple paintings showing pots similar to those rom the site in useor example, being usedto make winecan be helpul in developing hypotheses about activities at the site. Pottery may alsoreflect social status. Te areas where the finest serving vessels occur at a site may be the homes o thehighest ranking people.

    Te publication o a single corpus o pottery should also contribute to broader studies o ceramicsin Ancient Egypt. Every study that is published can help identiy the kinds o pottery associated withsettlements, cemeteries, or temples. Tey can contribute to working out how pottery was distributedthrough Egypt and possibly in identiying the ancient production centers. What pottery types weremade in Upper/Lower Egypt? Why and how did they circulate throughout all o Egypt?

    Te imported pottery rom a site contributes to a wider understanding o the Egyptian economy andoreign relations. What kind o pottery vessels were imported to Egypt? What was their origin? Whatkind o commodity did they contain? We also should keep in mind that some imported vessels were im-

    itated in Egypt, which raises the question as to why Egyptian potters made imitations o oreign pots.Ceramics may also be useul in examining socio-economic status in Ancient Egypt. What kind o

    pottery was used by king and nobles? What kind o vessels were used by workmen employed in the royalbuilding activities? What kind o pots were used by simple armers? What attributes characterize theseceramics? Which ones can be considered, or instance, royal?

    Te ceramics o the Heit el-Ghurab site at Giza illustrate some o the ways in which pottery cancontribute to an understanding o an ancient community. Te settlement is well dated to the late thDynasty and laid out with a number o different districts that are characterized by distinct sets o ma-terial culture. Tis includes pottery, which reflects some o the unctions o these different areas. Forexample, bread pots dominate the assemblages rom galleries and adjacent workshops, indicating bread

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    production on a massive scale. Differences in the type o serving vessels ound across the site reflect di-erences in social status. In the workmens barracks (the galleries) simple carinated bowls covered withwhite wash were used as serving vessels, while the large houses were equipped with many types o finered-slipped pots. Te Heit el-Ghurab pottery came rom a variety o sources. Most o the local ceram-ics probably came rom a centralized pottery workshop nearby, while another set o pots was importedrom Upper Egypt. Yet another group o ceramics came rom Syro-Palestine.

    Te most important point o the post-excavation work is to publish the ceramics. Tey are o limiteduse to the scholarly community until the collection is available in print.

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    Ceramic Glossary

    (see also Bourriau and Nordstrm ; Rice : especially ; Yon )

    Clay and Fabric

    Clay (fabric) Classification:the classification o clay types used or ceramics rom excavations

    Break:a resh break o the vessel wall made in order to be able to describe the clay Break porosity:the density o pores in the break, described as open, medium, or dense Clay:the material the pottery is made o, mostly consisting o silica Compacted: a term used by some ceramicists to describe a clay abric in which the inclusions and

    matrix are tightly packed, implying that the clay is homogenous in nature due to either itsnatural quality or higher levels o processing and levigation by the potter

    Fabric:the physical composition o a clay with inclusions, either naturally occurring and/or addedby the potter

    Grog:small pieces o fired and crushed ceramic; ofen added to clay Groundmass(or matrix, paste): the fine particles o clay and silt that make up the compositiono the clay

    Hardness:the resistance o a material to mechanical deormation, measured in units o the Mohsscale

    Inclusions:organic and non-organic particles present in the clay Levigated clay:clay that has been allowed to sit in water to remove impurities Marl clay:a calcareous clay, also known as desert clay (or tafla in Arabic) Mohs scale:a hardness scale consisting o a series o increasingly hard minerals rom (talc)

    to (diamond); used to speciy the relative hardness o a ceramic Nile clay:an alluvial clay associated with the Nile valley Organic inclusions:organic particles present in the clay, such as straw, chaff, dung, and ash Provenance:the geographical or geological origin o the clay source Qena/Ballas:a marl clay rom the Qena/Ballas region Raw material:a material as it comes rom the original source, beore preparation Tafla: marl clay emper:inclusions added to the clay by the potter to help enhance the unction o the pot. For

    example, sand can be added to clay used or cooking pots in order to prevent cracking duringtemperature change, and organic materials such as chaff might be added to make the pot wallsmore porous, allowing water vessels to cool more quickly. Additionally, a temper o grog canadd strength and stability to the walls o the pot.

    Uncompacted:a term used by some ceramicists to describe a clay abric in which the inclusionsand matrix are not tightly packed; implies that the clay is not homogenous in nature

    Vienna System:a schema or classiying Egyptian abrics and clays

    Manufacture Coil/slab-building:hand-building by the successive addition o slabs or coils o clay Composite contour:most ofen results when a potter applies pressure to the side o the pot wall

    during ormation on the wheel, thus altering the profile to create a composite o two basicgeometric shapes

    Core/hump:hand-building on a core or over a hump

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    Handmade:building without the use o a potters wheel Knife-cut:finishing the base using a knie/hard tool Method of production:techniques o vessel shaping

    Mold-shaping:hand-building with the use o a moldPaddle- and-anvil shaping technique:shaping with the use o two tools:

    the anvil, a round instrument used to press against the vessel wall rom the inside, and the

    paddle, a flat tool used to beat and support the wall rom the outsidePaddle-and-ground technique:a shaping technique similar to paddle-and-anvil, but using the

    surace o the earth/ground or shaping Potters wheel:a revolving platorm which moves on and around an axial pivot Simple contour: a term that implies that the potter allowed the natural centriugal orces o clay

    ormation on a wheel to shape the profile; or example, a simple outward flaring shapeor a simple cylindrical shape

    String-cut:finishing the base using a string or wire urning device:a device without a pivot incapable o sustained rotations Wheel-turned:building with the use o a potters wheel

    Surface Treatment Burnishing:producing a luster on the surace by rubbing it with a hard object (a pebble or

    instance) in the leather-hard stage; characterized by the presence o individual parallel acets Coat: a term used by some ceramicists to describe a layer o color on the surace that is not clearly

    identifiable as a slip or a wash, due to degradation o the pot and/or chemical processes withinthe soil

    Color:surace color description, ofen using the defined colors in the Munsell soil color chartsGlaze:powdered glass applied to the fired surace o a ceramic that is then fired a second time in

    order to use the powder and orm a thin, glassy coat Munsell soil color charts:charts o defined colors or the standardized identification and

    description o soil colors Polish:a glossy luster on the surace, produced by rubbing with a yielding tool in the leather-hard

    stage; lacks the individual parallel acets characteristic o burnishingScraping: the act o dragging a tool across the surace o the clay in order to shape or remove

    extra clay Slip:a coat added to the surace beore firing Smoothing:the process o evening the surace, usually without using tools, by hand Surface treatment (outside and inside): surace finishing methods

    rimming: a orm o scraping, implies a more precise removal o extra material Wash:a coat added to the surace afer firing

    Decoration Application:adding, beore firing, decorative elements to the exterior o the vessel Barbotine: a decorative technique in which liquid clay is applied, leaving a pattern that is slightly

    raised over the main surace; it usually reers to light colored applications applied over darkerceramic suraces beore firing, while the clay is still moist; ofen used or Early Roman pottery

    Cut-out decoration (also called enestration): a design created by cutting away sections o thewall, beore firing, in the leather-hard stage

    Decoration:additional surace treatment techniques

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    Impressed decoration:patterns made with a tool that is impressed in clay, beore firingIncised decoration:designs executed, beore or afer firing, with the aid o a sharp tool; sometimes

    filled with a pigment Modeling:manipulation and shaping o the vessel wall beore firing, while the clay is still moist

    (can also be done in a mold) Painted decoration:painting applied to the vessel beore or afer firing

    Potmarks:marks incised on the vessel (internal or external), beore or afer firing Sgraffito:a type o Medieval decorative technique in which an incision is cut through the slip

    revealing the original color o the clay beneath

    Type/Ware Classification ype:a category o ceramics defined by a common set o attributes (combination o technology,

    kind o clay, surace treatment, and shape o vessel) that distinguishes it rom another class opots

    ypology:a system o classification that organizes ceramics into types Ware: a category o ceramics defined by a combination o technology, clay, and surace

    treatment

    Drying and Firing Atmosphere:composition o gases in the air surrounding pottery during firing Drying:the process o evaporating water rom the ormed vessel Firing:transorming the clay into ceramic material under the influence o high temperatures Leather-hard:the stage o the drying process during which clay contains enough water to be

    carved or joined Oxidation:a firing atmosphere characterized by an abundance o ree oxygen Pottery kilns:an oven or other installation in which pots are fired Reduction:a firing atmosphere without the presence o oxygen, ofen with the presence o

    colloidal carbon Vitrification:the action or process o becoming glass

    Pottery Processing Diagnostic pieces:those rom which the original orm o the whole vessel can be deduced:

    complete pots, complete profiles, parts o rims, and parts o bases. Sherds with decoration andragments with potmarks are also included.

    Non-Diagnostic pieces:those rom which the original orm o the whole vessel cannot bededuced: non-descript body parts and sherds without decoration or potmarks

    Pottery Drawing Form:a orm or a drawing o the individual vessels

    Pottery Form:a orm or recording inormation about a given ceramic Pottery processing:the process o sorting pottery according to types and abrics

    Shape of Vessel Base:the underside o a vessel Body(wall): the part o the vessel between the rim and the base Bottle:a jar with a globular or ovoid body and an elongated narrow neck Bowl:an unrestricted vessel with base Carination:the concave portion o the vessel between the rim and the maximum diameter o

    the body

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    Complete pot:a vessel preserved in its entirety Complete profile:a profile o a vessel preserved in its entirety Jar:a restricted vessel with a neck and a height greater than its maximum diameter Max diameter:the maximum diameter o the body o a vessel

    Neck:the part o the vessel between the shoulder and the rim Plate: an unrestricted vessel with low, short walls and a flat base

    Profile:a vertical cross section through the body o a vessel Restricted vessel:a vessel with a rim diameter smaller than the maximum diameter o its body Rim:the opening o the vessel Sherd:a broken ragment o pottery Shoulder:the upper part o the body Stand:an unrestricted vessel without a base ray:an unrestricted vessel similar to a plate in shape, but ofen larger Unrestricted vessel:a vessel with a rim diameter greater than or equal to the maximum

    diameter o its body

    Special Analyses Elemental analysis:the identification o the chemical elements in a ceramic; may reflecttechnological changes, or define clay sources or kiln products

    Organic residue analysis:the identification o residue in pots; may reflect the diet o the peopleusing the pottery

    Petrography:the microscopic study and description o rocks or other mineral material on thebasis o optical properties

    Seriation:the chronological ordering o a group o artiacts in which the most similar are placedadjacent to each other in the series; used as a relative dating technique

    Termal analysis:determining the temperature at which the pot was fired

    Pottery Drawing Contour gauge:a drawing tool that helps trace the vessel shape Diameter measuring circle:a drawing tool used to determine the rim/base diameter o a broken

    pot Profile drawing:a drawing o the vertical cross section o a pot, showing wall thickness and details

    o the rim, as well as the configuration o the base

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    Bibliography for the IntroductionArnold, D., and J. D. Bourriau. .An Introduction to Ancient Egyptian Pottery, . Mainz am

    Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Becker, J. . Special Problems in Ceramic Illustration. In Te Students Guide to ArchaeologicalIllustrating, edited by B. D. Dillon, . Los Angeles: Institute o Archaeology, University oCaliornia.

    Bourriau, J. D., and H. . Nordstrm. . Ceramic echnology: Clays and Fabrics. InAn Introductionto Ancient Egyptian Pottery, edited by D. Arnold and J. D. Bourriau, , . Mainz amRhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Hope, C. .Egyptian Pottery. Shire Egyptology . Aylesbury: Shire.

    Joyce, O., and B. D. Dillon. . Ceramics. In Te Students Guide to Archaeological Illustrating, editedby B. D. Dillon, . Los Angeles: Institute o Archaeology, University o Caliornia.

    Orton, C., P. yers, and A. G. Vince. . Pottery in Archaeology.Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress.

    Rice, P. M. . Pottery Analysis: A Sourcebook. Chicago: University o Chicago Press.Shepard, A. O. . Ceramics or Archaeologists. Washington, : Carnegie Institute o Washington.

    Wodziska, A. . Preliminary Ceramic Report. In Project History, Survey, Ceramics, and the MainStreet and Gallery . Operations,Giza Reports , edited by M. Lehner and W. Wetterstrom,. Boston: Ancient Egypt Research Associates.

    Yon, M. . Dictionnaire illustr multilingue de la cramique du Proche Orient Ancien, Collection de laMaison de lOrient Mditerranen, Srie Archologique .Paris: Institut Franais dArchologiedu Proche Orient.

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    Further Reading: a General Selection on Ceramics

    Adams, W. Y. . Ceramic Industries o Medieval Nubia. Lexington: University Press o Kentucky.

    . . imes, ypes, and Sites: Te Interrelationship o Ceramic Chronology and ypology.: .

    Allen, S. J. . Spinning Bowls: Representation and Reality. InAncient Egypt, the Aegean and the NearEast: Studies in Honour o Martha Rhoads Bell, edited by J. Phillips, . San Antonio: VanSiclen.

    Amiran, R. .Ancient Pottery o the Holy Land: rom its Beginnings in the Neolithic Period to the Endo the Iron Age. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.

    Arkell, A. J. . Te Origin o Black-opped Red Pottery.: .

    Arnold, D. E. . Ceramic Teory and Cultural Process. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    . . Social Change and the Evolution o Ceramic Production and Distribution in a Maya

    Community. Denver: University Press o Colorado.Arnold, D. E., C. Renrew, and C. Gamble. . Ecology and Ceramic Production in an Andean

    Community.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Arnold, D. . Wandbild und Scherbenbeund. Zur pertechnik der Alten gypter von Beginn derpharaonischen Zeit bis zu den Hyksos.: .

    . . Gesse, Gessormen, Gessdekor. In , .

    . . Keramik. In , .

    . a. gyptischen Mergelton (Wstentone) und die Herkunf einer Mergeltonware desMittleren Reiches aus der Gegend von Memphis. In Studien zur altgyptischen Keramik, edited

    by D. Arnold, , . Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern., ed. b. Studien zur altgyptischen Keramik,. Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    . . perei, perwerkstatt, peren, perscheibe. In , .

    Arnold, D., and J. Bourriau. .An Introduction to Ancient Egyptian Pottery,. Mainz amRhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Arnold, D., C. Hope, P. . Nicholson, and P. Rose. . echniques and raditions o Manuacture inthe Pottery o Ancient Egypt. InAn Introduction to Ancient Egyptian Pottery, edited by D. Arnoldand J. D. Bourriau, , . Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Arnold, P. J., III. . Domestic Ceramic Production and Spatial Organization: A Mexican Case Study inEthnoarchaeology.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Aston, B. G. .Ancient Egyptian Stone Vessels. Materials and Forms.. Heidelberg:Heidelberger Orientverlag.

    Baba, M., and M. Saito. . Experimental Studies on the Firing Methods o Black-topped Pottery inPredynastic Egypt. InEgypt at its Origins. Studies in Memory o Barbara Adams. Proceedings othe International Conerence Origin o the State. Predynastic and Early Dynastic Egypt, Krakow,th Augustst September , edited by S. Hendrickx, R. F. Friedman, K. M. Ciaowicz, and M.Chodnicki, , . Leuven: Peeters.

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    Bader, B. . ell el-Daba : ypologie und Chronologie der Mergel -on Keramik, Vienna: Verlagder sterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschafen.

    . . A Concise Guide to Marl Pottery.gypten und Levante : .

    Barclay, K. . Scientific Analysis o Archaeological Ceramics: A Handbook o Resources. Oxord:Oxbow Books.

    Barnett, W. K., and J. W. Hoopes. . Te Emergence o Pottery: echnology and Innovation in AncientSocieties.Washington, : Smithsonian Institution.

    Bulletin de liaison du groupe international dtude de la cramique gyptienne. Cairo.

    Becker, J. . Special Problems in Ceramic Illustration. In Te Students Guide to ArchaeologicalIllustrating, edited by B. D. Dillon, . Los Angeles: Institute o Archaeology, University oCaliornia.

    Bey, G. J., and C. A. Pool. . Ceramic Production and Distribution: An Integrated Approach. Boulder:Westview Press.

    Bikai, P. M. . Te Phoenician Pottery o Cyprus.Nicosia: Leventis Foundation.

    Bishay, A. . Recent Advances in Science and echnology o Materials. Vol. . New York: Plenum Press.

    Bourriau, J. D. . Umm el-Gaab. Pottery rom the Nile Valley beore the Arab Conquest. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.

    . . Te Role o Chemical Analysis in the Study o Egyptian Pottery. In Proceedings o theSeventh International Congress o Egyptologists, edited by C. Eyre, , . Leuven:Peeters.

    Bourriau, J. D., A. Bellido, N. Bryan, and V. Robinson. . Egyptian Pottery Fabrics: a Comparisonbetween Grouping and the Vienna system. In imelines: Studies in Honour o ManredBietak,edited by E. Czerny, . . Leuven: Peeters.

    Bourriau, J. D., and P. . Nicholson. . Marl Clay Pottery Fabrics o the New Kingdom romMemphis, Saqqara and Amarna.: .

    Bourriau, J. D., and H. . Nordstrm. . Ceramic echnology: Clays and Fabrics. InAn Introductionto Ancient Egyptian Pottery, edited by D. Arnold and J. D. Bourriau, , . Mainz amRhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Bourriau, J. D., L. M. V. Smith, and P. . Nicholson. . New Kingdom Pottery Fabrics: Nile Clay andMixed Nile/Marl: Clay Fabrics rom Memphis and Amarna.London: Egypt Exploration Society.

    Bourriau, J. D., P. . Nicholson, and P. J. Rose. . Pottery. In Ancient Egyptian Materials andechnology, edited by I. Shaw and P. . Nicholson, . Cambridge: Cambridge University

    Press.

    Bronitsky, G. . Pottery echnology: Ideas and Approaches.Boulder: Westview Press.

    Brovarski, E. . Lexicographical Studies in Egyptian Pottery. : .

    Butzer, K. . Modern Egyptian Pottery Clays and Predynastic Buff Ware. : .

    Cahiers de la cramique gyptienne. Cairo.

    Cyganowski, C. J. K. . An Intersite Comparison o Middle Kingdom Lower Egyptian Marl Fabric.PhD thesis. University o Cambridge.

    David, A. R. .Science in Egyptology.Manchester: Manchester University Press.

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    Davies, P. O. A. L. . Red and Black Egyptian Pottery.: .

    Dorman, P. . Faces in Clay. echnique, Imagery, and Allusion in a Corpus o Ceramic Sculpture romAncient Egypt. . Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Drenkhahn, R. . Die Handwerke und ihre tigkeiten im Alten gypten.. Wiesbaden:Harrassowitz.

    Druc, I. C. .Archaeology and Clays. International Series . Oxord.Eggebrecht, A. . Keramik. In Das alte gypten,edited by C. Vandersleyen, . Propylen

    Kunstgeschichte . Berlin: Propylen Verlag.

    Esse, D. L. . Subsistence, rade, and Social Change in Early Bronze Age Palestine. Studies in AncientOriental Civilizations . Chicago: Oriental Institute o the University o Chicago.

    Fauvet-Berthelot, M., S. Monzon, and H. Balet. . Lexique et typologie des poteries: pour lanormalisation de la description des poteries. Paris: Editions.

    Freestone, I., and D. R. M. Gaimster. . Pottery in the Making: Ceramic raditions.Washington, :Smithsonian Institution Press.

    Freestone, I., C. Johns, and . W. Potter. . Current Research in Ceramics: Tin-Section Studies: theBritish Museum Seminar .London: British Museum.

    Goddard, S., D. Knight, J. Goddard, S. Hamilton, and S. Rouillard. .Aspects o Illustration:Prehistoric Pottery, Association o Archaeological Illustrators and Surveyors.Exeter: ExeterUniversity.

    Greenberg, R., and N. Porat. . A Tird Millennium Levantine Pottery Production Center. ypology,Petrography, and Provenance o the Metallic Ware o Northern Israel and Adjacent Regions.: .

    Griffiths, D., and M. Ownby. . Assessing the Occurrence o Egyptian Marl Ceramics in Middle

    Bronze Age Sidon.: .

    Hamroush, H. A. . Pottery Analysis and Problems in the Identification o the Geological Origins oAncient Ceramics. : .

    Hendrickx, S., R. F. Friedman, and F. Loyens. . Experimental Archaeology Concerning Black-opped Pottery rom Ancient Egypt and the Sudan. : .

    Hope, C. . Concerning Egyptian Potters Wheels.: .

    . a. Egyptian Pottery.Shire Egyptology . Aylesbury: Shire.

    . b. Experiments in the Manuacture o Ancient Egyptian Pottery. In Ceramics rom theDakhleh Oasis. Preliminary Studies,edited by W. I. Edwards, C. Hope, and E. R. Segnit, .Burwood, Australia: Victoria College Press.

    Jacquet-Gordon, H. . A entative ypology o Egyptian Bread Moulds. In Studien zur altgyptischenKeramik,edited by D. Arnold, , . Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Joyce, O., and B. D. Dillon. . Ceramics. In Te Students Guide to Archaeological Illustrating,editedby B. D. Dillon, . Los Angeles: Institute o Archaeology, University o Caliornia.

    Kelley, A. L. . Te Pottery o Ancient Egypt: Dynasty to Roman imes. oronto: Royal OntarioMuseum.

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    Kingery, W. D. . Ceramics and Civilization, Vol. , echnology and Style.Columbus, : AmericanCeramic Society.

    Khler, E. C. . Archologie und Ethnographie. Eine Fallstudie der prdynastischen und rhzeit-lichen pereiproduktion von ell el-Farain-Buto. : .

    . . Socio-economic Aspects o Early Pottery Production in the Nile Delta. : .

    Leeuw, S. E. van der. . Studies in echnology o Ancient Pottery.Amsterdam: Universiteit vanAmsterdam.

    Leeuw, S. E. van der, and A. C. Pritchard. . Te Many Dimensions o Pottery: Ceramics inArchaeology and Anthropology, Cingula . Amsterdam: Universiteit van Amsterdam.

    Lucas, A., and J. R. Harris. .Ancient Egyptian Materials and Industries.th edition. London: EdwardArnold.

    Matson, F. R. . Ceramics and Man. New York: Wenner-Gren Foundation or AnthropologicalResearch.

    Mazzoni, S. . Te Diffusion o the Palestinian Combed Ware. In Studies in the History and

    Archaeology o Palestine. Proceedings o the First International Symposium on the PalestineAntiquities,edited by S. Sha`ath, . Aleppo: Aleppo University Press.

    Merrillees, R. S. . Te Cypriote Bronze Age Pottery Found in Egypt,. Lund: Carl Bloms.

    Millett, M. . Pottery and the Archaeologist. London: Institute o Archaeology.

    Munsell. .Munsell Soil Color Charts.New Windsor, .

    Naschinski, A. .Mglichkeiten und Grenzen unktionaler Interpretation an Keramik: Experimente,Beobachtungen, Analysen. International Series . Oxord.

    Nelson, K. . Holocene Settlement o the Egyptian Sahara. Vol. . Te Pottery o Nabta Playa.NewYork: Kluwer Academic, Plenum Publishers.

    Nicholson, P. . . Te Firing o Pottery. In An Introduction to Ancient Egyptian Pottery,edited by D.Arnold and J. D. Bourriau, ,. Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Noll, W. . Mineralogy and echnology o the Painted Ceramics o Ancient Egypt. In ScientificStudies in Ancient Ceramics, edited by M. J. Hughes, . British Museum Occasional Paper. London: British Museum.

    . . Bemalte Keramik Altgyptens: Material, Rohstoffe und Herstellungstechnik. In Studienzur altgyptischen Keramik, edited by D. Arnold, , . Mainz am Rhein: Philipp vonZabern.

    . .Alte Keramiken und ihre Pigmente: Studien zu Material und echnologie.Stuttgart: E.Schweizerbart.

    Nordstrm, H. . . Cultural Ecology and Ceramic echnology. Early Nubian Cultures rom the Fifhand the Fourth Millennia ..Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis. Stockholm: Almqvist andWiksell.

    . . Neolithic and -Group Sites. Te Scandinavian Joint Expedition to Sudanese Nubia .Stockholm: Scandinavian University Press.

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    . . on. In : .

    Olin, J. S., and A. D. Franklin. .Archaeological Ceramics.Washington, : Smithsonian InstitutionPress.

    Orton, C., P. yers, and A. G. Vince. . Pottery in Archaeology.Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress.

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    Benben.

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    Regner, C. .Keramik.Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.

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    Steinmann, F. . ongesse von der vordynastischen Zeit bis zum Ende des Mittleren Reiches, Kataloggyptischer Sammlung in Leipzig .Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Vandiver, P., and P. Lacovara. . An Outline o echnological Changes in Egyptian PotteryManuacture. : .

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    Whipp, R. . Patterns o Labour: Work and Social Change in the Pottery Industry.London: Routledge.

    Yon, M. .Manuel de cramique chypriote. Lyon: Institut Courby.

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    Clay and Fabric Descriptions Used in Volume

    The Vienna SystemNILE FABRICS

    Material:

    Groundmass:homogenous fineInclusions:abundant fine, ofen medium-sized and occasionally coarse, sand; mica is commonReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ac

    Material:

    Groundmass:homogenous medium-fineInclusions:numerous fine with some medium-sized and coarse sand; mica is common; scattered

    fine (< mm) straw particlesReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate dh

    Material: Groundmass:homogenous mediumInclusions:abundant fine sand and common medium-sized sand; scattered limestone particles;

    noticeable fine to medium straw, with scattered coarse strawReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ad

    Material:Groundmass:coarseInclusions:numerous fine to coarse sand; some medium-sized limestone particles; predominance o

    fine to coarse straw; sometimes grogReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ei

    Material:

    Groundmass:fine to mediumInclusions:abundant limestone particles as in abrics such as , , or -Reference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ac

    Material:

    Groundmass:medium fineInclusions:abundance o fine to coarse sandReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate dh

    MARL FABRICS

    Material:

    Groundmass:homogenous fineInclusions:relatively abundant fine-medium crushed limestone, some fine sandReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ac

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    Material:

    Groundmass:fineInclusions:fine sand and limestone particlesReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate di

    Material:

    Groundmass:homogenous fineInclusions:ew mineral inclusions; characteristic pores in the clay; a ew accidental organic

    inclusionsRemarks:very similar to modern Qena wareReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ac, gh

    Material:

    Groundmass:medium to coarseInclusions:large quantity o fine to coarse sand; mica particles also present; and some straw

    particles

    Reference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate d, ij

    Material:

    Groundmass:homogenous and very denseInclusions:without voids; abundant quantities (around o the paste) o sand added as a temperReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ac, gh

    Material:

    Groundmass:fine and denseInclusions:abundant more or less decomposed limestone particles; fine and medium sand added

    as a temperReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm :

    Material:Groundmass:fine and homogenousInclusions:predominantly fine to coarse limestone particles added as a temper ( o the paste);

    fine to coarse sand; mica; dark rock materialReference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate ac, e

    Material:

    Groundmass:medium to coarse

    Inclusions:very similar to except or straw particles, here very abundant medium to coarse;numerous medium to coarse sand; some mica

    Reference:Bourriau and Nordstrm : , Plate d

    Material:Groundmass:mediumInclusions:abundant fine to medium sand, some mica and ew red particlesReference:Aston :

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    Clay Designations Used in the Manual and Comparison with the Vienna System

    Ceramicists ofen publish ancient Egyptian pottery with abric classifications rom their own sites, butin some cases they compare their site-specific classifications to the more widely known Vienna Systemto acilitate understanding and comparison with sites across Egypt. Te ollowing charts represent the

    equivalencies used in this volume.

    Second Intermediate Period Thebes

    (Seiler : )Vienna System

    (Bourriau and Nordstrm )

    , Nile clay , Nile clay , Nile clay , Nile clay , Nile clay , marl clay

    , marl clay , marl clay ~ variant o , marl clay , marl clay , marl clay , marl clay , marl clay , compact, marl clay , marl clay

    New Kingdom Saqqara

    (Bourriau et al. )Vienna System

    (Bourriau and Nordstrm )

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay

    , marl clay

    , marl clay

    , marl clay , fine

    Mixed clay abric , Mycenaean

    , Cypriote

    , , , Canaanite

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    New Kingdom, Amarna

    (Rose : )Vienna System

    (Bourriau and Nordstrm )

    ., Nile clay group

    ., Nile clay group

    ., Nile clay group

    ., Nile clay ., Nile clay variant

    ., Nile clay variant (?)

    ., marl clay /

    ., marl clay group

    ., marl clay group

    ., marl clay

    ., marl clay group

    ., marl clay group

    ., marl clay

    ., marl clay group

    ., marl clay group (?)

    ., marl clay

    ., oasis abric

    ., oasis abric

    ., oasis abric

    ., Canaanite

    .a, Canaanite

    ., Canaanite

    ., Canaanite

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    New Kingdom, Third Intermediate Period, Qantir

    (Aston : )Vienna System

    (Bourriau and Nordstrm )

    ., Nile clay

    ., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay .., Nile clay

    ., Nile clay

    ., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay

    ., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay

    .., Nile clay

    .., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    ., marl clay

    ., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    ., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    ., marl clay

    ., marl clay

    ., marl clay

    .., marl clay

    .., marl clay .., marl clay

    ., mixed clay

    ., mixed clay

    .., Levantine

    ., Dakhla

    , Cypriote

    , Aegean

    , Miscellaneous

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    Third Intermediate Period, Memphis

    (Aston : )Vienna System

    (Bourriau and Nordstrm )

    a, similar to , but better fired

    , dense Nile abric resembling marl, the

    surace is usually pale yellow, the section hasa narrow outer zone o reddish brown with wide blackcore. It contains inclusions o fine and medium-sizedsand and mica, with somelimestone particles, fine straw, and translucent red-brownand dark rock particles (Aston : ).

    , fine Nile abric, sandy variant

    , fine Nile abric, with fine sand, a little

    limestone, and some black grit

    (?)

    group

    , Late Period dense marl, firing rom greenthrough yellow buff to pink to white. Te usual coloris light brown with reddish yellow core. Te inclusions(grog-ochre, sand, limestone, little coarse straw) are notrequent (Aston : ).

    , hard, dense abric with distinctive section,with zones o reddish yellow at the surace,yellow, pink, and pale yellow, a wide gray core. It con-tains inclusions o fine straw, sand, mica, dark grit, andlarge pieces o grog (up to mm). Perhaps pots made othis abric are o Dakhla origin (Aston : ).

    , dense, medium-textured abric with lightbrown, orange/pink, orange, brown, yellow and graysurace. Te inclusions are numerous limestone particlesrom southern oasis (Aston : ).

    , , , , , , Levantine wares

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    Third Intermediate Period, Tanis

    (Bavay : )Vienna System

    (Bourriau and Nordstrm )

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay , Nile clay

    , marl clay

    Late Period, Tanis

    (Chauvet and Marchand : )Tanis

    (Bavay : )Vienna System

    (Bourriau and Nordstrm )

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay , Nile clay

    , Nile clay

    , Nile clay

    , marl clay

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    Te ollowing charts are examples o two site-specific classification systems used in this volume.

    Valley of the Queens, Thebes(Lecuyot : note )

    Nile clay

    Very fine Nile clay

    Fine Nile clay

    Medium Nile clay

    Coarse Nile clay

    Very coarse Nile clay

    Marl clay

    Kaolinite clay o Aswan

    Very fine kaolinite clay o Aswan

    Fine kaolinite clay o Aswan

    Medium kaolinite clay o Aswan

    Late Period: Amarna(French : )

    Silt

    Marl ware a Hard pink through buff to gray with occasional red inclusions, numerous very smallblack particles

    Marl ware b Related to a, pale brown in break, pink outside with gray-green core, with moder-ate quantity o quartz, numerous small limestone particles visible on the surace

    Marl ware c Related to a and b, brick-red with many quartz inclusions

    Marl ware d Related to a, b, and c, pale pinkish brown with many very small black inclusions,and limestone particles, some larger (up to . cm)

    Marl ware a Assumed to be an import

    Marl ware b Assumed to be an import

    Marl ware c Assumed to be an import

    Marl ware d Assumed to be an import

    Marl ware Possibly an import

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    Bibliography for Clay Descriptions, Volume Aston, D. A. . Die Grabungen Des Pelizaeus-Museums Hildesheim in Qantir-Pi-Ramesse. Die

    Keramik Des Grabungsplatzes . eil . Corpus O Fabrics, Wares And Shapes. Mainz am Rhein:Philipp von Zabern.

    . . Pottery o the welfh to Seventh Centuries . In Te Survey o Memphis . Te TirdIntermediate Period Levels, edited by D. G. Jeffreys and D. A. Aston, . London: EgyptExploration Society.

    Bavay, L. . La cramique dans le secteur du parvis de la porte monumentale. In anis: travauxrcents sur le tell Sn el-Hagar: Mission ranaise des ouilles de anis, edited by P. Brissaud and C.Zivie-Coche, . Paris: Noesis.

    Bietak, M. . ell el-Daba . Ein Friedhosbezirk der Mittleren Bronzezeitkultur mit otentempel undSiedlungsschichten, eil .Vienna: Verlag der sterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschafen.

    Bourriau, J. D., and H. . Nordstrm. . Ceramic echnology: Clays and Fabrics. InAn Introductionto Ancient Egyptian Pottery, edited by D. Arnold and J. D. Bourriau, , . Mainz amRhein: Philipp von Zabern.

    Bourriau, J. D., D. A. Aston, M. J. Raven, and R. van Walsem. . Te Memphite omb o Horemheb,Commander-in-chie o utankhamun : Te New Kingdom Pottery. London: Egypt ExplorationSociety.

    Chauvet, V., and S. Marchand. . La cramique prptolmaique des osses de lavant-cour de templedAmon de anis. In anis: travaux rcents sur le tell Sn el-Hagar: Mission ranaise des ouilles deanis, edited by P. Brissaud and C. Zivie-Coche, . Paris: Noesis.

    French, P. . Late Dynastic Pottery rom the Vicinity o the South ombs. InAmarna Reports , editedby B. Kemp, . London: Egypt Exploration Society.

    Hope, C. A. . Excavations at the Birket Habu . Jar Sealings and Amphorae o the th Dynasty. A

    echnological Study.Warminster: Aris and Phillips.

    Lecuyot, G. . La cramique de la Valle des Reines. Bilan prliminaire. : .

    Nicholson, P. ., and P. R. Rose. . Pottery Fabrics and Ware Groups at el-Amarna. InAmarnaReports , edited by B. Kemp, . London: Egypt Exploration Society.

    Rose, P. J. . Te Eighteenth Dynasty Pottery Corpus rom Amarna. Excavation Memoir . London:Egypt Exploration Society.

    Seiler, A. . radition und Wandel: die Keramik als Spiegel der Kulturentwicklung Tebens in derZweiten Zwischenzeit,. Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

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    Second Intermediate Period

    thth Dynasties

    Material

    Te very fine marl that was used during the th and th Dynasties became coarser and sandierduring the Second Intermediate Period.

    For a key to clay type abbreviations, please see Clay/Fabric Descriptions, pp. .

    ManufactureTe ceramics were mostly wheel-made and then finished by hand or on a wheel. Some pots, especiallylarge ones, were made in sections: first the base, then the lower body, followed by the upper body andrim. Sometimes the bodies of large pots were handmade and later finished on a wheel.

    Surface

    Te surface of Second Intermediate Period pots may be simply smoothed or burnished. But they mayalso be red-coated and smoothed or burnished.Te common incised and applied decoration used since the end of the Middle Kingdom became

    even more common during this period. Simple painted bands on the rim, especially on squat carinatedjars, were probably influenced by Palestinian and Cypriote wares. A very characteristic decoration iswhite dots on plates (see Second Intermediate Period ).

    TypesTe pottery from the Second Intermediate Period can be divided into two groups: ) early SecondIntermediate Period, and ) late Second Intermediate Period (Bourriau : ). Te first group includesthe pottery derived from the late Middle Kingdom with regional variations. Te second group, on theother hand, shows the beginning of changes in the ceramic repertoire that was typical for the early NewKingdom.

    Te hemispherical bowls very common in the Middle Kingdom are still present, but they are nowdeeper.

    Small one-handled juglets, called ell el-Yahudiyeh ware, appear. Tese are made of black ware, of-ten with a burnished surface. Tey usually have incised decoration filled with white pigment. Te jars,known in Cyprus, Nubia, Egypt, and the Levant, were produced only in Egypt and the Levantine area.Pots in the shape of fish or birds were also manufactured in this same ware.

    For photos of ceramics representative of this period, see Color Plates .

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    BibliographyAmiran, R. .Ancient Pottery o the Holy Land: rom its Beginnings in the Neolithic Period to the End

    o the Iron Age.New Brunswick, : Rutgers University Press.

    Aston, D. A. . Qantir/Piramesse Nord: Pottery Report . : .

    . . Die Grabungen Des Pelizaeus-Museums Hildesheim in Qantir-Pi-Ramesse. Die Keramik desGrabungsplatzes . eil . Corpus o Fabrics, Wares and Shapes. Mainz am Rhein: Philipp vonZabern.

    Bietak, M. . Avaris and Piramesse: Archaeological Exploration in the Eastern Nile Delta, MortimerWheeler Archaeological Lecture, . London: British Academy.

    Bourriau, J. D. . Umm el-Gaab. Pottery rom the Nile Valley beore the Arab Conquest. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.

    Brunton, G. . Qau and Badari . London: British School of Archaeology in Egypt.

    Holthoer, R. . New Kingdom Pharaonic Site. Te Pottery,Scandinavian Joint Expedition .. Lund:

    Holmes and Meier.Hope, C. A. . Egyptian Pottery. Shire Egyptology . Aylesbury: Shire.

    Kaplan, M. L. . Te Origin and Distribution o ell el Yahudieh Ware, . Gteborg: PaulAstrom.

    Peet, . E. . Te Cemeteries o Abydos Part , .London: Egypt Exploration Fund.

    Petrie, W. M. F., and G. Brunton. . Sedment .London: British School of Archaeology in Egypt.

    Rzeuska, . I. . La ncropole pharaonique au dbut du Nouvel Empire. La cramique dEdfou auMuse National de Varsovie. In ell-Edou soixante ans aprs. Actes du colloque ranco-polonaise,Cairo octobre , edited by N. Grimal, . Cairo: .

    Seiler, A. . Hebua . Second Intermediate Period and Early New Kingdom Pottery. : .

    . . radition und Wandel: die Keramik als Spiegel der Kulturentwicklung Tebens in derZweiten Zwischenzeit, . Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.

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    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:QantirShape:globular jar with everted rimMaterial:..

    Manufacture:thrownSurface:plainReference:Aston : , Figure Dating:late Second Intermediate Period

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:QantirShape:globular jar with everted rimMaterial:..Manufacture:thrownSurface:plain, with black painted decorationReference:Aston : , Figure Dating:late Second Intermediate Period

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:QantirShape:slender cylindrical jar with

    rounded baseMaterial:..Manufacture:thrownSurface:plainReference:Aston : , Figure .;

    Aston : , Figure Compare:Brunton : Plate xiv.;

    Holthoer : Plate //e-fDating:late Second Intermediate PeriodRepresentative Example: similar to

    Color Plate .

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    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:QantirShape:slender ovoid jar with rounded baseMaterial:..

    Manufacture:thrownSurface:plain, with incised decorationReference:Aston : , Figure Compare:Bourriau : ,

    Figures Dating:late Second Intermediate Period

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:Dra Abu el-NagaShape:ovoid jar with simple rim and six

    parallel incised lines below rim on

    the outsideMaterial:Manufacture:thrownSurface:smoothed, with thin red coat outside

    and white coat on the rimReference:Seiler : ,

    Figure , /Dating:th Dynasty

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

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    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:EdfuShape:bottle with ovoid body and conical neck

    Material:Manufacture:thrownSurface:vertically polishedReference:Rzeuska : , ,

    Figure ( )Dating:Second Intermediate Period early th DynastyRepresentative Example: similar to

    Color Plate .

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:EdfuShape:bottle with conical body and round

    recurved rim

    Material:Manufacture:thrownSurface:red-coated, with string impressionReference:Rzeuska : , ,

    Figure ( )Dating:Second Intermediate Period early th Dynasty

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    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:Dra Abu el-NagaShape:beer bottle with ovoid body and

    flaring neck

    Material:Manufacture:made of three parts and

    thrown on slow wheelSurface:smoothed, with red coat inside on

    upper part of the neckReference:Seiler : ,

    Figure , /Dating:thth Dynasties

    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:Dra Abu el-NagaShape:bottle with globular body and

    flaring neck

    Material:Manufacture:thrownSurface:red-coated, strip-polishedReference:Seiler : ,

    Figure , /Dating:th DynastyRepresentative Example: similar to

    Color Plate .

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    Second Intermediate Period

    Site:QantirShape:flat-based jar with ovoid body and everted rimMaterial:..

    Manufacture:thrownSurface:plainReference:Aston a: , Figure .;

    Aston : , Figure Dating:late Second Intermediate Period

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    1:4

    0 5 10 cm

    Second Intermediate Period

    Si