المؤلف
Unknown
تاريخ النشر
1380
مكان النشر
Iznik (made) Turkey -
الموضوع
Arabesques Interlacing Stripes
النوع
أخرى
اللغة
غير محدد
رقمي
نعم
مخطوط
لا
الأبعاد الفيزيائية
Height: 18.1cm, Diameter: 13.3cm
المكتبة
Victoria and Albert Museum
معرف أصل المكتبة
C.114-1909
رقم السجل
C.114-1909
موقع المكتبة
Middle East Section
التاريخ
1380
ملاحظات
Potters in Ottoman Turkey reponded to costly imported Chinese blue-and-white porcelain by disguising their red earthenware vessels with a white tin-glazed slip; vessels were then painted in cobalt blue before glazing. Their geometric designs show only a distant understanding of the Chinese porcelains that inspired them. These imitations, made over a long period, probably from the 14th century to the early 16th, were widely distributed. It was first excavated in the ruins of ancient Miletus in south-west Turkey, and consequently, came to be known as 'Miletus ware', however, as wasters and kiln debris of this type of ware have been excavated at Iznik in north-west Turkey, much is now attributed to Iznik, although it may also have been made elsewhere.
Malzemeler ve teknikler
Earthenware, slip-covered, underglaze painted in cobalt blue, and glazed Earthenware Slip Glaze Glazed Painted
Fiziksel açıklama
Jug of red earthenware, 'Miletus ware', painted in black on a white slip and covered with a clear glaze. Depressed bulbous body painted with arabesques, a striped loop handle, and a wide cylindrical neck decorated with vertical stripes below a band of interlaced ornament.
Üretim
register notes Ar-Raqqah