The Introduction of the Potter's Wheel to Ancient Sudan

被引:3
|
作者
Doherty, Sarah K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Dept Continuing Educ, Rewley House,1 Wellington Sq, Oxford OX1 2JA, England
关键词
potter's wheel; Middle-Late Bronze Age; ceramics; Sudan; Egypt; colonisation;
D O I
10.24916/iansa.2021.2.14
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Doherty (2015) has previously investigated the origins of the potter's wheel in Egypt in depth. However, how the potter's wheel came to be used in Sudan has not yet been properly analysed. This paper will present the author's initial investigations into the pottery industry of Sudan and the manufacturing techniques employed by Sudanese potters. Evidence seems to suggest that rather than being an indigenous invention, the potter's wheel came to Sudan as part of the colonisation of Sudan by Egypt during the Middle-Late Bronze Age. Throughout this period, various Egyptian towns were founded along the river Nile. One such town was Amara West (inhabited c. 1306-1290 BC). By the Middle Bronze Age, Sudanese potters had well-developed pottery techniques, principally coil- and slab-building. Amara West and other Egyptian colonies used the by then well-established wheel-throwing and coiling techniques (RKE) to manufacture their pottery, principally imported from Egypt. However, these colony towns contained both Sudanese and Egyptian vessels, sometimes in the same contexts, and occasionally with blended manufacture techniques and decoration. This paper will endeavour to postulate upon the effect and legacy of the imposed technology of the potter's wheel on the Sudanese pottery industry.
引用
收藏
页码:299 / 309
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Ancient Greek Potter's Wheel: Experimental Archaeology and Web Applications for Velocity Analysis
    Neth, Brandon
    Hasaki, Eleni
    [J]. INTERDISCIPLINARIA ARCHAEOLOGICA-NATURAL SCIENCES IN ARCHAEOLOGY, 2021, 12 (02): : 115 - 125
  • [2] A developmental approach to ancient innovation The potter's wheel in the Bronze Age east Mediterranean
    Knappett, Carl
    van der Leeuw, Sander
    [J]. PRAGMATICS & COGNITION, 2014, 22 (01) : 64 - 92
  • [3] Glass bowls made on the potter's wheel. A new approach to ancient glass technology
    Lierke, Rosemarie
    [J]. Glastechnische Berichte, 1991, 64 (12): : 310 - 317
  • [4] Reconsidering Technological Transmission: The Introduction of the Potter's Wheel at Ayia Irini, Kea, Greece
    Gorogianni, Evi
    Abell, Natalie
    Hilditch, Jill
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGY, 2016, 120 (02) : 195 - 220
  • [5] The Tracing the Potter's Wheel Project (TPW): An Integrated Archaeological Investigation of the Potter's Wheel in the Bronze Age Aegean
    Hilditch, Jill
    Jeffra, Caroline
    Opgenhaffen, Loes
    [J]. INTERDISCIPLINARIA ARCHAEOLOGICA-NATURAL SCIENCES IN ARCHAEOLOGY, 2021, 12 (02): : 345 - 355
  • [6] The Beginner's Guide to Wheel Throwing: A Complete Course for the Potter's Wheel
    Knowles, Sandra
    [J]. LIBRARY JOURNAL, 2021, 146 (08) : 73 - 73
  • [7] Of pots and puns - Poetry & the potter's wheel
    Blazina, J
    [J]. CERAMICS-ART AND PERCEPTION, 2005, (62) : 82 - 86
  • [8] THE 'SPEED OF THE WHEEL IS UP TO THE POTTER' - SHREVE,S
    MESSENGER, C
    [J]. CANADIAN LITERATURE, 1994, (140): : 108 - 109
  • [9] A Return to the Wheel: Rethinking Experimental Methodologies for the Study of the Potter's Wheel
    Minos, Chase A. M.
    [J]. INTERDISCIPLINARIA ARCHAEOLOGICA-NATURAL SCIENCES IN ARCHAEOLOGY, 2021, 12 (02): : 127 - 142
  • [10] Use of the potter's wheel at Shimao, Shaanxi, China
    Guo, Meng
    Sun, Zhouyong
    Shao, Jing
    [J]. ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ASIA, 2023, 36