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  2. Black-glazed Ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-glazed_Ware

    Black-glazed ware is a type of ancient Greek fine pottery. The modern term describes vessels covered with a shiny black slip. Black-glazed pottery was produced especially in the Classical and Hellenistic periods. During the reducing phase of the three-phase firing sintering of the iron-rich "clay

  3. Slipware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slipware

    Often only pottery where the slip creates patterns or images will be described as slipware, as opposed to the many types where a plain slip is applied to the whole body, for example most fine wares in Ancient Roman pottery, such as African red slip ware (note: "slip ware" not "slipware"). Decorative slips may be a different colour than the ...

  4. Wari-Bateshwar ruins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wari-Bateshwar_ruins

    The discovery of rouletted and knobbed ware, and stone beads of eclectic nature implies southeast Asiatic and Roman contacts through river routes. [1] [7] It is postulated by Sufi Mostafizur Rahman, the leader of the first excavation team, that Wari-Bateshwar is the ancient emporium or trading post "Sounagora" mentioned by Ptolemy in Geographia ...

  5. Northern Black Polished Ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Black_Polished_Ware

    Proto-NBPW was first reported by Giovanni Verardi in his excavations at Gotihawa in the Terai of Lumbini, Nepal, recognised as the transitional phase from Black Slipped Ware to Northern Black Polished Ware, which can be identified through its lustrous black surface with red spots, this spots are due to evident problems in the high temperature ...

  6. Slip (ceramics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slip_(ceramics)

    African red slip ware: moulded Mithras slaying the bull, 400 ± 50 AD.. A slip is a clay slurry used to produce pottery and other ceramic wares. [1] Liquified clay, in which there is no fixed ratio of water and clay, is called slip or clay slurry which is used either for joining leather-hard (semi-hardened) clay body (pieces of pottery) together by slipcasting with mould, glazing or decorating ...

  7. Ancient Roman pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Roman_pottery

    The two black jars to the left behind the cheese-press in the same photograph are examples of Romano-British black-burnished ware, first made in south-west England in the late Iron Age, before the Roman conquest: this ware continued to be popular throughout the Roman period, and was made in greater quantities, and marketed more widely, under ...

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  9. Minyan ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minyan_ware

    Caskey also found that the Black or Argive variety of Minyan Ware was an evolved version of the Early Helladic III "Dark slipped and burnished" pottery class. [4] [5] Therefore, Minyan Ware was present in Greece since between 2200 and 2150 BC. There is nothing particularly "northern" regarding the ceramic progenitors of Minyan Ware.