Tradition and Influence in the Dacian Pottery Discovered at Sarmizegetusa Regia (original) (raw)
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Roman Cooking Wares Discovered at Sarmizegetusa Regia
REI CRETARIÆ ROMANÆ FAVTORVM ACTA 46. Congressus tricesimus primus Rei Cretariae Romanae Fautorum Napocae habitus MMXVIII (Catarina Viegas ed.), 2020
The ceramic evidence from Sarmizegetusa Regia comprises a relatively important number of Roman kitchen wares, discovered especially in the area of the stone fortress. They seem to belong to the so-called ‘legionary pottery’ and are represented by wheelthrown cooking pots, lids and pans. Other recipients may be also ascertained to the Imperial ceramic production, as tableware, amphorae, turibula, mortaria, and even construction materials were unearthed during the excavations at Grădiștea de Munte. The cooking pots belong to archaeological contexts dated after the conquest of Sarmizegetusa Regia, at the beginning of the 2nd century. The vessel distribution reveals a concentration in the area of the fortification. Analogies are found in the province of Dacia and in the forts spreading on the Danube limes. We may presume that these cooking pots are linked to the presence of Roman legionary troops in the former capital of the Dacian Kingdom (epigraphic sources indicate the presence of soldiers from Legio IV Flavia Felix, Legio VI Ferrata and Legio II Adiutrix Pia Fidelis). The analysis of their fabric points to a local production for a part of the cooking pots and lids.
Pottery from Sant'Imbenia (Sardinia, Italy): functions vs decorations
Metrology for Archaeology and Cultural Heritage, Torino, October 19-21, 2016, 2016
– The Nuragic site of Sant'Imbenia in Alghero (northwestern Sardinia, Italy) was inhabited approximately between the 14 th and the 7 th century BC. During the last centuries of its life, Sant'Imbenia lived a population of locals and foreigners, i.e. Levantines and, probably, Greeks. It is obvious that as well as goods and raw materials. At Sant'Imbenia by these exchanges and contacts it was developed a new local pottery production: in it converged local taste and " foreign " knowledge. After nine years of research and analysis we have realize a new classification of the pottery produced in the site from the beginning of the IA (10 th-8 th centuries BC). In this paper preliminary data on production technology of local wares will be presented: they were obtained by archaeometric analysis (MOP, IA, XRD, XRF) on pottery and raw materials sampled in a large area around the site. This part of the work is, in our opinion, fundamental in order to realize an archaeometric and technological classification of material that has to support the pottery typology.
ATLAS OF ROMAN POTTERY WORKSHOPS FROM THE PROVINCES DACIA AND LOWER MOESIA/SCYTHIA MINOR (1ST-7TH CENTURIES AD) (I), 2018
The publication of a volume featuring up-to-date information concerning the pottery production of the workshops based in the two Roman provinces founded on the territory of modern-day Romania, i.e. Dacia and Lower Moesia / Scythia Minor, is a comprehensive project that could only be brought to a successful conclusion with the combined effort of the entire community of Roman pottery specialists from Romania. The hosting of the 31st International Congress of the Rei Cretariae Romanae Fautores in Romania in 2018 represented the ideal opportunity for the implementation of this project whose main goal is to particularize the pottery production within the above mentioned two provinces in the wider context of the ceramic industry across the entire Empire.