Browse Items (8 total)

  • Tags: Pottery

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0201_JeruArch063.jpg

An especially high quality of pottery, modeled after Nabataean pottery, was produced in Jerusalem toward the end of the Second Temple period. It is very thin and delicate, with hand-painted designs that are impressive for this period. Note the lack…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0176_BibArch133.jpg

This jug, which was found in the Jewish Quarter excavations in Jerusalem, is made of a type of pottery called Eastern Terra Sigillata 'A', or ESA. Its red, lustrous slip is one of the hallmarks of this kind of pottery and is partially the result of…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0127_BibArch130.jpg

All three of these vessels can be dated to the late 6th or early 5th century BCE, during the first decades of Persian control of Palestine. However, pottery forms do not change simply because the political control does. As a result, these forms look…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0120_BibArch131.jpg

This beautiful urn was made by a well known Greek potter and vase painter around 450 BCE. It was imported to Judah and found in the ruins of a Persian grain storage center at Tel Jemmeh. The reason that an elegant urn from Greece ended up in Judah is…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0065_BibArch129.jpg

The pottery shown here is typical of Israelite pottery from the Iron II period (10th-7th centuries BCE). The folded shapes in the foreground are folded lamps. Oil would be placed in the bowl-like part and a wick would be placed in the narrow portion…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0064_BibArch128.jpg

This distinctive type of painted pottery has been found at sites along the southern coast of Palestine from the 12th and 11th centuries BCE, which has led scholars to conclude that this is 'Philistine pottery,' as the Philistines were known to have…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0030_BibArch124.jpg

This photograph shows some of the common pottery from the Middle Bronze I period (2,000-1,900 BCE). The basin-shaped vessel in the foreground center with the four pinched corners is an ancient lamp. Oil would be put inside and wicks would run through…

http://lrc-tesuto.lrc.lsa.umich.edu/HJCSimg/0029_BibArch123.jpg

This photograph shows some common every-day pottery from the Early Bronze Age (3,300-2,000 BCE). Because archaeologists find more pottery sherds than anything else in an excavation, it is the main source of information for dating the architecture of…

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