Moreno-Alcaide, M. et al (2020): CAMBIO, ADAPTACIÓN Y RESILIENCIA EN EL YACIMIENTO ARQUEOLÓGICO DE EL LADERÓN (DOÑA MENCÍA, CÓRDOBA, ESPAÑA). ESTUDIO DE LA TERRA SIGILLATA PROCEDENTE DEL SECTOR 4 DEL OPPIDUM ÍBERO-ROMANO. REI CRETARIÆ ROMANÆ FAVTORVM ACTA 46. 77-82 (original) (raw)
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Laura Rembart - Alice Waldner (Hrsg.), Manufacturers and Markets. The Contribution of Hellenistic Pottery to Economies Large and Small Proceedings of the 4th Conference of IARPotHP, Athens, November 2019, 11th-14th (IARPotHP 4), Wien, pp. 365-382, 2022
The results of the recent excavations carried out at Cerro Macareno (La Rinconada, Seville) have improved the in-progress study of the table ware repertoire used by the populations of the Bay of Cadiz and the interior of the Guadalquivir valley (the Turdetani of the classical sources) and its transformation immediately before and after the Roman conquest. The addition of new “Hellenized” consumption patterns among the communities of the Mediterranean far west was a result of the intermediation of Punic Gadir and its sphere of influence, which played a key role as main port and agent of change for most of the ceramic repertoires and in-style uses in the post-Classical western Mediterranean. This process gained momentum with the annexation of these territories by Rome, the extension of the commercial networks and the influence of the Italic populations that settled in the new Hispanic provinces. Even so, the interior of the Turdetanian region mostly remained unconnected to the cooking and culinary consumption patterns that became widespread at the time, adapting kitchen and table wares to their own tradition. Singular patterns of use in both local fine ware production and imports (“Kuass-type” ware, Italic black glazed fine ware, thin-walled pottery, etc.) have been observed in the available archaeological record and should be verified in some other recently unearthed contexts. In this paper, the pottery found in contemporaneous contexts (dating to the end ofthe 2nd century B.C.) in two ports at the ancient mouth of the Guadalquivir is established, all of them closely related to the seaborne Punic trade: Spal (Seville) and Cerro Macareno (La Rinconada, Seville).
http://hispania.revistas.csic.es/index.php/hispania/article/view/585/583 Los orígenes de las vajillas cerámicas valencianas, uno de los productos más codiciados de la Baja Edad Media, se han explicado tradicionalmente desde el punto de vista de la oferta. El interés por los aspectos tecnológicos y estilísticos —productivos— ha tendido a eclipsar las cuestiones que van más allá de los objetos, que afectan al punto de vista del consumidor: ¿hasta qué punto fue clave la demanda de obra de terra de la propia sociedad valenciana en el inicio de su producción? Este artículo valora esta cuestión a través de una muestra de 232 inventarios de bienes de entre 1283 y 1349, sobre los que se aplican los análisis cuantitativos propios de la historiografía del consumo. Se argumentará que, antes de la Peste Negra, el consumo de vajillas cerámicas presentaba enormes desigualdades en el seno de la sociedad medieval, y que el peso de su demanda recaía sobre un sector social particular de la ciudad de Valencia. Se propondrá además que era el factor de la moda, y no el del coste, el que no sólo explique este consumo restringido, sino la posterior popularización de estos productos. --- The origins of Valencian ceramic tableware, one of the most coveted products of the Late Middle Ages, have traditionally been explained from the supply perspective. The attention given to technological and stylistic–i.e. productive–aspects has tended to eclipse the issues that go beyond the objects themselves and affect the viewpoint of the consumer: to what extent was the demand for obra de terra by Valencian society key to the start of its production? This essay considers this matter using a sample of 232 probate inventories from between 1283 and 1349, to which will be applied quantitative analysis based on the historiography of consumption. It will be argued that, before the Black Death, the consumption of ceramic tableware illustrated huge inequalities within medieval society, and that the weight of its demand corresponded to a particular social group in the city of Valencia. It will be also advocated that it was fashion rather than cost which explains not only this limited consumption, but also the subsequent popularization of these products
Characterization of Commercial Archaeology in Spain
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Material Exchanges in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Archaeological Perspectives, 2021
Busto Zapico, M. (2021). A Mandatory Stop: The Trade of Imported Pottery in Asturias (NW Iberian Peninsula) during the Early Modern Period. En M. E. Naum, J. Linaa, & S. Escribano-Ruiz (Eds.), Material Exchanges in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Archaeological Perspectives (Vol. 9, 113-142). Turnhout: Brepols. This research presents the analysis of 3066 sherds, which were found in thirty-four archaeological excavations carried out across six regions of Asturias (NW of the Iberian Peninsula, Spain). The fragments come from twenty-one different pottery production sites and date between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. The archaeological study of this ceramic material has offered new insights into the pottery trade in Asturias during the early modern period. The results of this study help us to reconstruct the historical processes that shaped the society of Asturias in that period.
The contact between the European and the Native American worlds was the beginning of a period of conquest and colonisation that broke or changed the tradition of the native populations, giving pass to a new political, economical, religious, and townplanning period. While the first European foundations were just survival driven ones, they became strategic foundation in order to develop a proper colonial enterprise. The European culture arrival into the Americas brought also a new material culture that modified the already existing native cultural world. At the same time, the European culture was also modified, and new cultural expressions emerge from these new complex societies. Pottery as a perdurable material remains is a privilege record of these processes. In order to shed light to this period of the European presence in continental America, an archaeological and archaeometric program is being conducted within the Tecnolonial project focussed on majolica, glazed coarse wares and transport jars, as well as indigenous and European-influenced pottery. One of the main results is that in order to assess a correct implementation of these studies, a deep knowledge of the production centers is compulsory. Two case studies will be here exposed, Barcelona and Seville, together with some examples of technological changes.
2021
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Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 2022
Cobatillas la Vieja is one of the main settlements for understanding the beginning of the Late Bronze Age (14th-13th centuries cal. BC) in the southeast of the Iberian Peninsula. After the macroscopic study of their ceramic assemblage, 30 representative samples were analysed by thin-section petrography, X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and binocular microscopy to address issues of provenance and technology. The characterization of four different fabric groups and several individuals reveals a more complex picture of production traditions, pottery exchange and consumption than often assumed for this period of supposed recession and socio-cultural transition. Potters' choices in different production locations are discussed, with an examination on the nature of consumption in two households that suggest both regional and interregional exchange of ceramics in the Late Bronze Age.