Olivier P. Nieuwenhuyse (éd.), Relentlessly Plain. Seventh Millennium Ceramics at Tell Sabi Abyad, Syria (original) (raw)
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This article highlights a specific Cypriot production: the White Shaved Ware. Less easily identifiable than the other Late Cypriot wares discovered on the Levantine coast, sometimes neglected in ancient excavations, this ceramic is not less significant. The study of the distribution and the discovery contexts of the White Shaved Ware contributes to the understanding of the complex links established between the Northern Levant and Eastern Cyprus in the Bronze Age.
Whereas historical, political and cultural researches are being stepped up for the post medieval Period in Lebanon, interests for archaeological artifacts remains neglected. The Archaeological excavations undertaken in 1996 and 1997 in Beirut, sites Bey 070, Bey 071 and Bey 111, led to the discovery of table ware ceramics (in the surface layers) dated to the 16th – 19th centuries. In this paper we examine table ware ceramics from various origins: Didymoteicho and Çanakkale (Thrace), Kütahya and Iznik (Analolia), Pisa and Monteloupo (Tuscany), Albisola in Liguria, Varages in Provence, european porcelain, as well as local and/ or regional ceramics.
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