Results 161 to 170 of about 1,590 (217)
A chemical examination of faience found in Nubia: preliminary observations
Egyptian faience has been extensively studied, while faience found in Nubia has received little attention. This pilot study uses scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectrometry (SEM-EDS) to examine 30 faience samples (bead and vessel ...
Juliet V Spedding
exaly +2 more sources
The beginning of faience in China: A review and new evidence [PDF]
Despite decades of research into faience artefacts in China, many questions remain about how, where and by whom this technology began. This study combines published and new results of chemical analysis, morphology and chronology of the earliest faience ...
Thilo Rehren
exaly +1 more source
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Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archäologie, 2021
Abstract The present article discusses the question of the standardization of Middle Assyrian material culture using the example of faience. Assemblages of faience objects, discovered at numerous Middle Assyrian sites, form the basis of this study.
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Abstract The present article discusses the question of the standardization of Middle Assyrian material culture using the example of faience. Assemblages of faience objects, discovered at numerous Middle Assyrian sites, form the basis of this study.
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Bulletin des musées et monuments lyonnais, 1964
Tricou Jean. Faiences héraldiques. In: Bulletin des musées et monuments lyonnais, Volume 3, 1964 N°3. pp. 195-204.
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Tricou Jean. Faiences héraldiques. In: Bulletin des musées et monuments lyonnais, Volume 3, 1964 N°3. pp. 195-204.
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2013
Abstract This article discusses glass and faience, two materials that were used during the Bronze Age to make beads. Unlike faience, which is a mixture of silica crystals and glassy material, glass only appeared during the Late Bronze Age.
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Abstract This article discusses glass and faience, two materials that were used during the Bronze Age to make beads. Unlike faience, which is a mixture of silica crystals and glassy material, glass only appeared during the Late Bronze Age.
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2011
Discusses the distribution of the pottery type in post-medieval London, and considers whether the workshops from which the patterns found in London originated can be identified.
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Discusses the distribution of the pottery type in post-medieval London, and considers whether the workshops from which the patterns found in London originated can be identified.
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New evidence of long-distance interaction across the Himalayas: Faience beads from Western Tibet
Journal of Cultural Heritage, 2021Rui Wen, Wangdue Shargan
exaly

