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  2. Canopic jar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canopic_jar

    [5] [6] The most common materials used to make the jars include wood, limestone, faience, and clay, and the design was occasionally accompanied by painted on facial features, names of the deceased or the gods, and/or burial spells. Early canopic jars were placed inside a canopic chest and buried in tombs together with the sarcophagus of the ...

  3. Pandora's box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandora's_box

    Many scholars see a close analogy between Pandora herself, who was made from clay, and the clay jar which dispenses evils. [12] The mistranslation of pithos is usually attributed to the 16th-century humanist Erasmus who, in his Latin account of the story of Pandora, changed the Greek pithos to pyxis, meaning "box". [13]

  4. Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottery

    Hand building a jar. Pottery is the process and the products of forming vessels and other objects with clay and other raw materials, which are fired at high temperatures to give them a hard and durable form. The place where such wares are made by a potter is also called a pottery (plural potteries).

  5. Glossary of pottery terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_pottery_terms

    -- "China, earthenware and any article made from clay or from a mixture containing clay and other materials." [13]-- "A class of ceramic artifacts in which clay is formed into containers by hand or in molds or with a potter's wheel, often decorated, and fired" [14]

  6. List of cooking vessels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cooking_vessels

    Olla – a ceramic jar, often unglazed, used for cooking stews or soups, for the storage of water or dry foods, or for other purposes. Pipkin – an earthenware cooking pot used for cooking over direct heat from coals or a wood fire. Palayok – a clay pot used as the traditional food preparation container in the Philippines used for cooking ...

  7. Mycenaean pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycenaean_pottery

    Mycenaean ceramics included pots made with the potter's wheel, a technology originally invented millenia earlier in the Near East. Many historians question how Mycenaean potter's developed the technique of glossing their pottery. Some speculate that there is an "elite or a similar clay mineral in a weak solution" [7] of water.

  8. Crossword

    www.aol.com/games/play/masque-publishing/crossword

    Crossword. Solve puzzle clues across and down to fill the numbered rows and columns of the grid with words and phrases. By Masque Publishing. Advertisement. Advertisement. all. board. card. casino.

  9. Japanese pottery and porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_pottery_and_porcelain

    The earliest pieces were made by pressing the clay into shape. This method continued to be employed after the invention of the wheel, such as when producing Rengetsu ware. Coiled methods developed in the Jōmon period. Production by kneading and cutting slabs developed later, for example, for haniwa clay figures.