Results 11 to 20 of about 53 (45)

Turkish-Islamic Period (13th-15th Centuries) Unglazed Ceramics Found in Amorium Inner Wall Excavations: Cookware Finds

open access: yesSanat Tarihi Yıllığı
Unglazed ceramic finds constitute one of the most common types of finds in many archaeological excavations carried out in Anatolia. Unglazed ceramics, which are utilised to cook, heat, store, or serve various foods, are important archaeological data in ...
Mehmet Kurt
doaj   +1 more source

ULUSAL MİMARLIK DÖNEMİ KONYA YAPILARINDA TÜRK ÇİNİ SANATINDAN YANSIMALAR

open access: yesİstem, 2014
Konya of Seljuk was also the capital of knowledge, culture and art alongside to be the politic capital. Seljuk structures appear as places where many arts, especially tile art, were applied.
Kâzım Küçükköroğlu
doaj  

A Tale of Two Port Cities: Ayasuluk (Ephesus) and Balat (Miletus) during the Beyliks Period

open access: closedAl-Masāq, 2019
ABSTRACTEphesus and Miletus, the leading port cities of the ancient world in western Anatolia, fell into gradual decline during the Byzantine period.
Çağla Caner Yüksel
openaire   +2 more sources

Moulded ware production in the Early Turkish/Beylik period in western Anatolia: A case study from Ephesus and Miletus

open access: closedJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 2017
Abstract The beginning of the Turkish period in western Anatolia saw the arrival of new ceramic types in the local pottery repertoire, related to the ‘Islamic’ world. To study this evolution from Byzantine to Turkish times, we have focused in this paper on one of these types, moulded wares, and two sites, Miletus and Ephesus.
Sylvie Yona Waksman   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

A curious manuscript from the beylik period: recontextualizing Falname (No.5179)| [PDF]

open access: possible, 2022
This thesis examines a fortunetelling manuscript called Falname (no.5179) from the National Library of Turkey, which has previously been dated to the 16th century. The study focuses on the question of whether the manuscript was produced earlier than suggested, namely in the Beylik period, by analyzing the text and the illustrations.
openaire  

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy