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Incipient Jomon rope pottery 10000–8000 BCE [citation needed] Middle Jomon Period rope pottery 5000–4000 BCE Jomon vessel 3000–2000 BCE, Flame-style Pottery [de; ja; pl] (Flamboyant Ceramic, Kaen-doki) The Jōmon pottery (縄文土器, Jōmon doki) is a type of ancient earthenware pottery which was made during the Jōmon period in Japan.
Incipient Jōmon pottery (14th–8th millennium BC) Tokyo National Museum, Japan Jomon flame-style pottery, 3,000 BC, excavated at the Iwanohara site, Niigata Prefecture. The earliest pottery in Japan was made at or before the start of the Incipient Jōmon period. Small fragments, dated to 14,500 BC, were found at the Odai Yamamoto I site in 1998.
Excavations in 1998 uncovered forty-six earthenware fragments which have been dated as early as 14,500 BC (ca 16,500 BP); this places them among the earliest pottery currently known. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] As the earliest in Japan, this marks the transition from the Japanese Paleolithic to Incipient Jōmon . [ 4 ]
Cord-marked pottery required a technique of pressing twisted cords into the clay, or by rolling cord-wrapped sticks across the clay. The Japanese definition for the period of prehistory characterized by the use of pottery is Jōmon ( 縄文 , lit. cord-patterned) and refers to the entire period (c. 10,500 to 300 BC). [ 18 ]
Prehistory Japanese Arts: Jomon Pottery (Kodansha International, 1968). The Art of Japan (Century Publishing, 1985). The Lucky Seventh: Early Hōryū-ji and its Time (ICU Harchiro Yuasa Memorial Museum, 1999). Himiko and Japan’s Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai: Archaelogy, History, and Mythology (University of Hawai’i Press, 2007).
Jomon Hot Spot: Increasing Sedentism in Southwest Japan in the Incipient Jomon (14, 000 – 9, 250 cal BC) and Earliest Jomon (9, 250 – 5,300 cal BC) World Archaeology 38:2: 239-258, 2006. Early Mediaeval Trade on Japan’s Southern Frontier: Grey Stoneware of the East China Sea.
The style of pottery created by the Jōmon people is identifiable for its "cord-marked" patterns, hence the name "Jōmon" (縄文, "straw rope pattern").The pottery styles characteristic of the first phases of Jōmon culture used decoration created by impressing cords into the surface of wet clay, and are generally accepted to be among the oldest forms of pottery in East Asia and the world. [9]
They crafted lavishly decorated pottery storage vessels, clay figurines called dogū, and crystal jewels. A Final Jōmon dogū statuette (1000–400 BCE), Tokyo National Museum . The oldest examples of Jōmon pottery have flat bottoms, though pointed bottoms (meant to be held in small pits in the earth, like an amphora ) became common later. [ 3 ]
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