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  2. Bolesławiec pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolesławiec_pottery

    Bolesławiec pottery was created as a mainly functional product, and still is functional today although the designs have increased in quality and intricacy. It falls in a very different category from fine English and Asian china and pottery that demands high prices in today's marketplace. [ 22 ]

  3. Bolesławiec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolesławiec

    Meanwhile, back in Bolesławiec, a new and Polish chapter in the pottery's history was opening, after the city had been severely damaged in the war and its German population expelled. The Polish population that moved in found the surviving ceramic manufacturies stripped of machinery and equipment.

  4. Porcelain manufacturing companies in Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porcelain_manufacturing...

    Bolesławiec: Bolesławiec: Poland: Originated in the Middle Ages and developed in the 17–19th centuries 1809: Porcelain Manufacture Ćmielów: Ćmielów: Poland: Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship: 1817: Real Fábrica de La Moncloa: Madrid: Spain: It was the successor of the Real Fábrica del Buen Retiro: 1824: Vista Alegre: Ílhavo: Portugal

  5. Category:Polish pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Polish_pottery

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  6. Hedwig Grossman Lehmann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedwig_Grossman_Lehmann

    Later Grossman moved to a small potter's village in Lower Silesia and further developed her pottery skills. After that she moved to Bolesławiec where she studied the Chemistry of Pottery and experimented with clay from Israel, as she was interested in moving to Israel. Grossman moved to Berlin in 1930 and opened a pottery workshop. She ...

  7. Bronze and Iron Age Poland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze-_and_Iron-Age_Poland

    It was probably made up of diverse post-Neolithic populations, whose common characteristic was the type of pottery – large vessels with a thickened upper edge and a horizontal decorative protrusion around the neck, first found around northern Germany at the beginning of the millennium. Their own production of bronze objects came late and only ...

  8. Stroke-ornamented ware culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stroke-ornamented_ware_culture

    Model of the STK settlement at Dresden-Nickern, showing longhouses and circular enclosures. The Stroke-ornamented ware (culture) or (German) Stichbandkeramik (abbr. STK or STbK), Stroked Pottery culture, Danubian Ib culture of V. Gordon Childe, or Middle Danubian culture is the successor of the Linear Pottery culture, a major archaeological horizon of the European Neolithic in Central Europe.

  9. Lusatian culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lusatian_culture

    Virchow identified the pottery artifacts as 'pre-Germanic' but refused to speculate on the ethnic identity of their makers. [ citation needed ] The Polish archeologist Józef Kostrzewski , who started in 1934 to conduct extensive excavations of a Lusatian settlement of Biskupin , hypothesised that the Lusatian culture was a predecessor of later ...