Results 151 to 160 of about 1,089 (206)

Early pottery kilns in the Middle East

open access: yesPaleorient, 2000
In this paper a current overview of the development of Neolithic and Chalcolithic pottery kilns in the Middle East is given in order to initiate further, more detailed kiln studies. In the context of early pyrotechnology several issues concerning technical, economic and social aspects of kiln construction and operation are addressed.
Hansen Streily, Andrea   +1 more
exaly   +4 more sources

Medieval Pottery Kilns in the Carpathian Basin

European Journal of Archaeology, 2002
This article discusses tenth–sixteenth-century pottery kilns in the Carpathian Basin in the territory of medieval Hungary. Kilns are classified on the basis of their structure, building technique and firing technology and these characteristics are examined using archaeological evidence, ethnographical sources and also technological and pyrotechnical ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Pottery and pottery kilns of the post-medieval period at Brill, Buckinghamshire

Post-Medieval Archaeology, 1979
AbstractTwo discoveries of pottery kilns at Brill, Buckinghamshire, during construction work in 1974 and 1975 are described. One, a fairly complete kiln, is dated to the early seventeenth century and two others to the latter half of that century. The last working Brill kiln of 19th-century date was also re-discovered.
exaly   +2 more sources

Romano-British Pottery Kilns at Caldicot, Gwent

Archaeological Journal, 1990
Rescue excavation at Caldicot, Gwent (ST 4787) revealed at least six kilns of late third to early fourth century A.D. date, along with evidence for earlier (third century) production. Jars form the most important class of vessel produced and forms reminiscent of BB1 were particularly significant.
P V Webster
exaly   +2 more sources

The Structure of Romano-British Pottery Kilns

Archaeological Journal, 1957
The Archaeological Journal, 114, 10 ...
exaly   +2 more sources

Roman Pottery-Kilns at Colchester

Journal of the British Archeological Association, 1877
exaly   +2 more sources

A Pottery Kiln at Catterick

Britannia, 1996
Evaluation excavations undertaken in early 1994 revealed elements of a ditch system and a pottery kiln within the confines of RAF Catterick (NGR SE 24350 96900). The site is located on river gravels close to their interface with the Boulder Clays that occupy the areas to the west and south. The River Swale lies some 700 m to the east and the site forms
P. A. Busby   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

A medieval pottery kiln in Exeter

The Antiquaries Journal, 1957
This kiln was first discovered in 1931 when Messrs. Hughes erected the Bedford Garage on the site of the former Blue-Coat School (St. John's Hospital) in the upper part of the city. The architect, the late Mr. Harbottle Read, was interested in the structure and arranged that it should be preserved in a pit, 4 ft. 6 in.
Aileen Fox, G. C. Dunning
openaire   +1 more source

A Sula-Ulúa Pottery Kiln

American Antiquity, 1941
On the western end of the north coast of Honduras, the outstanding river is the Ulúa, whose basin is formed by the plain of Sula. In the south, the gradually descending steps of the Cordilleras with the open avenues of the Ulúa on the west and her tributaries, the Lindo due south and the Comayagua at the east, bring contact to the wet valley of Sula ...
Doris Stone, Conchita Turnbull
openaire   +1 more source

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