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Black-burnished ware : ウィキペディア英語版 | Black-burnished ware
Black-burnished ware is a type of Romano-British ceramic. It comprises wheel-thrown grey or black sand-tempered wares, typically everted-rim jars with burnished lattice decoration, bead-rim and plain dishes. There are two sub-types of the Black-burnished ware fabric. Black burnished ware 1 (BB1), produced in Dorset, was a black, coarse and gritty fabric widely distributed from AD 120 to the late 4th century. Black burnished ware 2(BB2) is a finer, grey-coloured, wheel thrown fabric produced at sites around the Thames Estuary (Kent and Essex) and distributed in south-east England and in northern Britain from 120 AD to the mid 3rd century. ==Black Burnished Ware==
Black burnished ware is a type of Romano-British ceramic. It is also known as “common black (or gray) ware” and also “fumed ware.”〔Farrar, R. A. H. 1973. The techniques and sources of Romano-British black-burnished ware. S.l: s.n.].〕 Black burnished ware is “manufactured in two different fabrics” and takes a form that is typical for culinary vessels.〔 Black burnished ware also comes in two different categories that are based upon the location of where the ware was created and the components of the clay body as well as how it is made (such as by hand or wheel-thrown even though one way does not strictly belong to one category or the other). The categories are named Black Burnished Ware Category 1 (BB1) and Black Burnished Ware Category 2 (BB2). Decoration on both categories consists of everted-rims with burnished lattice design on the body. Plain dishes are also known.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Black-burnished ware」の詳細全文を読む
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