Ancient Pottery Vessels

A collection of historical pottery and wine bottles, showcasing unique shapes and textures from different eras and cultures.

Small stoneware jug with ear, low belly and long, conical neck, jug crockery holder soil find ceramic stoneware clay engobe glaze salt glaze, surface 4.5 hand turned glazed baked stoneware jug gray shard salt glaze local brown engobe subtraction traces on the underside bandoor protruding ring under mouth rim rotations around the neck. Low abdomen and long conical neck archeology import pottery serve save drink package
Small stoneware jug with ear, low belly and long, conical neck, jug crockery holder soil find ceramic stoneware clay engobe glaze salt glaze, surface 4.5 hand turned glazed baked stoneware jug gray shard salt glaze local brown engobe subtraction traces on the underside bandoor protruding ring under mouth rim rotations around the neck. Low abdomen and long conical neck archeology import pottery serve save drink package
Small stoneware jug with ear, low belly and long, conical neck, jug crockery holder soil find ceramic stoneware clay engobe glaze salt glaze, surface 4.5 hand turned glazed baked stoneware jug gray shard salt glaze local brown engobe subtraction traces on the underside bandoor protruding ring under mouth rim rotations around the neck. Low abdomen and long conical neck archeology import pottery serve save drink packageWine bottle from the wreck of the East Indians' t Vliegend Hart, Anonymous, 1700 - 1735  Uivid glass wine bottle. The glass irises. The bottle is closed with paint but wine is missing. There is something in it (rattles). Netherlands .Jar about 4th century Roman. Jar. Roman. about 4th century. Apparently almost colorless glass with a brown or yellowish tint. Blown, the body inflated in a dip mold, the rim finished at the furnace.. GlassJug ca. 900-700 B.C. Iran This jug has a globular body, a flat base and a narrow mouth. A tube-like spout emerges from near the base and is connected to the shoulder of the jug by a loop handle, large enough for a single finger. The jug is made from a red-brown clay, and has been burnished. It was likely made on a wheel with the spout added later.This jug was excavated at Tepe Sialk, near Kashan in central Iran. Sialk was the site of a fortified town, constructed in the early first millennium B.C. Several hundred yards from the town there was a large cemetery, called Necropolis B by the archaeologists who explored it between 1933 and 1937. The graves were pits covered with pitched roofs made of stone or clay, and in addition to the bodies of the dead they contained jewelry, weapons, leather armor, horse trappings and ceramic vessels, including many similar jugs. The jugs function is unclear. It is too small to have been used as a serving vessel. Possibly it was used in a funerary rituJar with two handles 1st century Roman. Jar with two handles. Roman. 1st century. Transparent blue glass. Blown, tooled, the rim finished at the furnace, the handles applied.. GlassVase ". Transparent gray-green coverage sandstones. Northern China, Cizhou. Paris, Cernuschi museum. Asian art, Chinese art, Chinese Ceramic, Cizhou, container, extended form, container, terracotta, vaseStoneware jug, small and rounded model with collar around neck, on stand, jug holder soil found ceramic stoneware glaze salt glaze, hand-turned glazed fried crooked neck flat dented ear spherical belly flat bottom. Fully covered with rings. Gray shard. Yellow-beige. In the clay rust clogs are visible through the use of iron-bearing clay archeology Rotterdam Kralingen-Crooswijk Struisenburg Oostmaaslaan indigenous pottery import kitchen oil food preparation packaging Soil discovery: Oostmaaslaan at the site of the Schieland pumping station.Amphora with lid Etruscan On each side frieze of lions in relief; spiral knob on cover.. Amphora with lid. Etruscan. Terracotta. VasesZun type vase ". bronze. Zhou dynasty in the West. Paris, Muse Cernuschi. Asian art, western zhou dynasty, extended form, zun type, vase, archeological vestigeDark jug with pinched foot, shank, ear, proto-stoneware, jug crockery holder soil find ceramic stoneware h 17,5 neck 7,6 abdomen 11,1 stand surface 7,6 hand-turned baked Proto stoneware jug dark gray chamois cuff-shaped mouth rim with clip-clip bandoor profiled turnings around neck shoulder and upper half of the belly pinched foot archeology Rotterdam import pottery serving serve drinking wine beer Probably soil find Rotterdam.Vase, spindle-shaped. Culture: Greek. Dimensions: 9 1/16in. (23cm).Gray clay with red painted bands. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Pottery pot on stand, baluster shape, used in the sugar industry, sugar bowl pot holder soil find ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand-turned glazed earthenware pot on stand. Baluster shape with round shoulder and narrow neck opening. Thick and round neckline protruding neck. Fuzzy spindles over the shoulder Red shard internal glazed Here sugar cones were made archeology indigenous pottery sugar confectionery craft sugar industryBottle 5th century B.C.-A.D. 1st century Paracas. Bottle 308295Brown stoneware jug, with rad stamping around neck and shoulder, jug crockery holder soil find ceramic stoneware clay engobe glaze salt glaze, hand turned stamped glazed baked stoneware jug gray shard salt glaze gray brown mottled bandoor protruding edge with radstamp decoration below the mouth rim radstamp decoration around the top half of the belly rotations around the belly pinched foot belly model with cylindrical neck archeology import pottery serve serve drink store serve serveThe Eight Immortals (Chinese: Baxian; Pa-hsien) are a group of legendary 'xian' (immortals; transcendents; fairies) in Chinese mythology. Each Immortal's power can give life or destroy evil. Most of them are said to have been born in the Tang Dynasty or Song Dynasty. They are revered in Daoism (Taoism) and are also a popular element in secular Chinese culture. They are said to live on a group of five islands in the Bohai Sea which includes Penglai Mountain-Island.Jar. Culture: French. Dimensions: Overall: 8 3/16 x 4 3/4 in. (20.8 x 12.1 cm). Date: 13th-14th century. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Jarre ". Terracotta with Green lead coverage. Paris, Cernuschi museum. Chinese art, Chinese Ceramic, Green Leading, Jar, terracotta coveredCooking pot ca. 9th-10th century A.D. Islamic. Cooking pot 323004URNA DE LA NECROPOLIS DE TUGIA. IBERICO CERAMICA. (DEPOSITO: MUSEO ARQUEOLOGICO NACIONAL).Vase hu. Terracotta with celadon covered. China, period of the 6 dynasties. Paris, Cernuschi museum. 72687-7 Asian art, ceramic, ancient ceramic, covered, email, glacure, iIieme IIIe III 3rd 3rd century, IVEME IVE IV 4th 4th 4th century, Chinese object, Chinese Pottery, Content, Six 6 Dynasties, Terracotta, Terracotta Emaillee, Vase , Vase hu hou, veme ve v 5th 5th 5th century, vieme vie 6th 6th 6 centuryPottery pot on stand, baluster shape, was used in the sugar industry, sugar bowl pot holder soil find ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand-turned glazed earthenware pot on stand. Baluster shape with round shoulder and narrow neck opening. Thick and round neckline Smooth finished Red shard internal glazed Sugar cones made here archeology indigenous earthenware sugar confectionery craftsmanship sugar industryJug 2nd millennium B.C.. Jug 324309Jug ca. late 8th-7th century B.C. Israelite. Jug. Israelite. ca. late 8th-7th century B.C.. Ceramic. Iron Age II. Levant, Lachish (modern Tell ed-Duweir)United Arab Emirates, Dubai. Dubai Museum located on the grounds of the Al Fahidi Fort, circa 1787. Pottery vessel, 3th millennium BC. (Large format sizes available)Jar ca. 9th century B.C. Iran. Jar 325278Stoneware jug, Jug or jacobakan on pinched foot, slightly flamed, Jug or jacobakan jug crockery holder soil find ceramic stoneware, hand turned baked gray shard. Unglazed yellow-brown parts scattered over the body on pinched foot embroided neck and belly Hole in belly closed by the potter and small hole next to it probably filled with plaster. The jug is crooked and distorted and possibly always leaked archeology native pottery import drink serve serve servePottery belly model ointment jar, red shard, internally glazed, ointment jar holder soil found ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand turned glazed baked Pottery belly model ointment jar red shard internal glazed Slanted inwardly directed wide top edge. Narrowing of the boiler above the stand Level with light soul archeology health care indigenous pottery pharmacy store sell craftVasija trípode con patas-sonajero. Cerámica. Período VI (1000-1500 d. C.). Región de Nicoya, Costa Rica. Museo de América. Madrid. España.Lazio Roma Subiaco Monastery of S. Scolastica Archaeological Museum7. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 Antiquities: Views of antiquities in museum, including sarcophagi, plates, vases, coins. General Notes: Hutzel guide says we have negatives, but we cannot find them. German-born photographer and scholar Max Hutzel (1911-1988) photographed in Italy from the early 1960s until his death. The result of this project, referred to by Hutzel as Foto Arte Minore, is thorough documentation of art historical development in Italy up to the 18th century, including objects of the Etruscans and the Romans, as well as early Medieval, Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque monuments. Images are organized by geographic region in Italy, then by province, city, site complex and monument.Pottery belly model ointment jar, red shard, internally glazed, ointment jar pot holder soil find ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand turned glazed baked Pottery ointment red shard internally glazed. Belly model with narrowing above the foot. Flat obliquely inward facing top edge standing surface. Stand surface coarsely finished. Turning beads inside archeology health care indigenous pottery import pharmacy store sell craftItaly. Sardinia. Nuragic civilization. Ceramic jug. 8th century BC. From Sardara. Archeological Museum of Cagliari.Decorated tumbler, final Jomon period, terracottaPottery ointment jar, cylindrical, red shard, internally glazed, ointment jar pot holder soil found ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand turned glazed baked Pottery ointment jar. Cylindrical in shape with outstanding straight upper edge. Red shard internally glazed. Turning bottles Bottom of poorly finished pot is unstable on rooted earthenware Misbaksel; leak hole in soil archeology health care indigenous pottery packing pharmacy store sell medicine drug craftVessel ca. 3rd century B.C.-1st century A.D. Seleucid or Parthian. Vessel 325090Glass Bottle with Faceted Decoration. Dimensions: H. 5 5/8 in. (14.3 cm)Diam. 3 1/4 in. (8.3 cm). Date: 9th-10th century.The shape of this bottle seems to have been popular in glass as well as metal and glazed pottery. Though it is hard to say which medium gave way to the other, this particular faceted variety with horizontal grooves marking the transitions between the different decorative sections of the vessel has especially close parallels in metal. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Pottery ointment jar, conical model, red shard, internally glazed, ointment jar pot holder soil find ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand-turned glazed baked Pottery ointment jar conical model red shard internal glazed Slanted inwardly directed top edge Surface coarse finish Conical surface above the foot narrowing of the kettle Swivel spindles on the inside archeology health care indigenous pottery pharmacy store sell craftSmall vase with handles in the shape of shachi. unknown, craftsmanFooted goblet ca. 1600-1200 B.C. Iran This goblet has a globular body, a wide mouth, and a high foot. It is made of a gritty, yellowish-buff clay, and much of the body is restored. It was excavated at Zarde Savar, a small cemetery site in Luristan in the Zagros Mountains of western Iran. The shape is comparable to those of Late Bronze Age vessels excavated at Tepe Giyan to the east. Thus this goblet, and the cemetery at Zarde Savar, perhaps also date to this period.. Footed goblet 324004Bottle with Bulbous Neck ca. 14th century Thailand. Bottle with Bulbous Neck 37458VesselBottle 19th century Japan. Bottle. Japan. 19th century. Clay with glaze and splash (Kiyomizu ware). Edo (1615-1868) or Meiji period (1868-1912). CeramicsWine Warmer (Jue), c. 1300-1023 BC. China, Shang dynasty (c.1600-c.1046 BC), Anyang phase (c.1250-1046 BC). Pottery, tripod vessel with loop handle and rudimentary bowstring decoration; diameter: 13.4 cm (5 1/4 in.); overall: 11.7 cm (4 5/8 in.).Lazio Roma Subiaco Monastery of S. Scolastica Archaeological Museum5. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 Antiquities: Views of antiquities in museum, including sarcophagi, plates, vases, coins. General Notes: Hutzel guide says we have negatives, but we cannot find them. German-born photographer and scholar Max Hutzel (1911-1988) photographed in Italy from the early 1960s until his death. The result of this project, referred to by Hutzel as Foto Arte Minore, is thorough documentation of art historical development in Italy up to the 18th century, including objects of the Etruscans and the Romans, as well as early Medieval, Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque monuments. Images are organized by geographic region in Italy, then by province, city, site complex and monument.Cylindrical vase with large collar ". Terracotta. Vietnam-Xe-Xive s. Paris, Cernuschi museum. 72186-24 Large collar, Vietnamese object, terracotta, cylindic vaseBottle. Roman; Syria. Date: 101 AD-400 AD. Dimensions: H. 9 cm (3 1/2 in.); diam. 5.5 cm (2 1/8 in.). Glass, blown technique. Origin: Syria. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA. Author: ANCIENT ROMAN.Bell-shaped vase belonging to the Castro culture. Iron Age. Ceramics. PORTUGAL. BRAGA. Guimaraes. Association Martins Sarmento Museum. Proc: PORTUGAL. BRAGA. Guimaraes. Citania de Briteiros.Pottery pot on stand, baluster shape, used in the sugar industry, sugar pot pot holder soil find ceramics earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand-turned glazed earthenware pot on stand. Baluster shape with round shoulder and narrow neck opening. Thick round neckline with waistline. Made from fairly dry clay. Faint coarse turnings. Red shard internal glazed Here sugar cones were made archeology indigenous earthenware sugar confectionery sugar industryPottery ointment jar, cylindrical model, red shard, internally glazed, ointment jar holder soil find ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand turned glazed baked Pottery ointment jar cylindrical model red shard internal glazed Flat obliquely inwardly directed thin top edge Stand surface with light soul Narrowing of the kettle just above the foot . Pot is coarsely finished cuts in the bottom show that the pot with knife is separated from the turntable. Turning beads on the inside on the bottom archeology health care indigenous pottery pharmacy store sell craftPottery oil lamp, snot nose, small pot with hanging ear and spout, above dish, oil lamp lamp lighting tool earth discovery ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand turned hand shaped glazed baked earthenware oil lamp snot nose small pot with hanging ear and spout top dish with schenklip Interconnected by pillar of earthenware archeology Rotterdam Stadscentrum Stadsdriehoek Oudehaven indigenous pottery kitchen lighting room lamp Soil discovery: Oude Haven Rotterdam.Jar. Culture: China. Dimensions: H. 30 3/4 in. (78.1 cm). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Glass two-handled jar 4th-5th century A.D. Roman Translucent pale blue-green; handles in streaky translucent purple.Vertical, rounded, and possibly tubular rim, with projecting horizontal flange below; broad, funnel-shaped neck; uneven shoulder, sloping on one side, horizontal and slightly pushed-in on the other; body with convex side, tapering downward; concave bottom, with small, circular pontil scar; two handles applied in large, thick pads to edge of shoulder, drawn up vertically, turned in and trailed onto flange and then up to top of rim (where one is folded back on itself as a short trail, and the other is broken off).Intact; few bubbles; patches of soil encrustation and weathering, some dulling and iridescence.. Glass two-handled jar 254682 Roman, Glass two-handled jar, 4th5th century A.D., Glass, H.: 4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Gift of Miss Ida H. Ogilvie, 1951 (51.80.1)Miniature Jar with Two Handles 15th-early 16th century Inca. Miniature Jar with Two Handles 309396Amfora. unknown, authorGreece, Athens, Conical vasePot to be measured ". Terracotta. Vietnam-Xe-Xive s. Paris, Cernuschi museum. 72185-29 Vietnamese object, pot to measure, terracottaEwer. Culture: China. Dimensions: H. 6 1/8 in. (15.6 cm). Date: 9th century. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Spouted jar Yortan ca. 2700-2400 BCEWavy-handled jar ca.3300-3100 0 B.C. Late Predynastic Period This jar is an example of a classic form of Predynastic pottery known as wavy-handled ware. The style is based on a specialized container for liquid products that was originally made in the Levant and imported into Egypt around 3500 B.C. Ancient Egyptian potters, using a local ware made from marl clay, subsequently began producing their own versions by adding wavy handles to some of their containers. Over time, the pair of wavy-handles became one continuous scalloped band seen in 99.4.66. Eventually, this decorative style became a simple band like the decoration on 12.187.4. A flat blade and some kind of scraper, which were used to finish the vessels surface during manufacture, have both left distinct tool marks that are still visible today. Although we do not know what this jar contained, others of similar type held fat-based substances.. Wavy-handled jar. ca.3300-3100 0 B.C.. Pottery. Late Predynastic Period. From Egypt; PSpouted jar with eagle incised in high relief ca. mid-3rd millennium B.C.. Spouted jar with eagle incised in high relief 327833Campanian Black Juglet. UnknownLazio Roma Subiaco Monastery of S. Scolastica Archaeological Museum9. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 Antiquities: Views of antiquities in museum, including sarcophagi, plates, vases, coins. General Notes: Hutzel guide says we have negatives, but we cannot find them. German-born photographer and scholar Max Hutzel (1911-1988) photographed in Italy from the early 1960s until his death. The result of this project, referred to by Hutzel as Foto Arte Minore, is thorough documentation of art historical development in Italy up to the 18th century, including objects of the Etruscans and the Romans, as well as early Medieval, Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque monuments. Images are organized by geographic region in Italy, then by province, city, site complex and monument.Lecythus; terra-cottaStoneware Bartmann jug, also called Bellarmine jug, with Bartmann jug, also called Bellarmine jug, mask on the neck, Bartmann juggeruik tableware holder soil find ceramic stoneware glaze salt glaze, Under beard on front figure 4 engraved archeology drinkLazio Viterbo Viterbo Museo Civico20. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 Views of paintings (Middle Ages through 18th c.), frescoes, a tabernacle, coffin, sculpture reliefs, portal fragments, busts, sculpture, tapestry found in the Pinacoteca, Second floor gallery and Second floor cloister sequences. Antiquities: Many views of Etruscan and Roman fragments, sculpture, sarcophagi, pottery, masks, jewelry and other objects found in the Storeroom sequence (inventory numbers on back of prints), and the Cloister, Second floor Cloister, Valle Giulia, Sala Romana and Sala Etrusca sequences. General Notes: There are eight separate numerical sequences for this location. The cloister as an architectural structure, rather than museum site, is documented in the record and file for S. Maria della Verita, Cloister, all views of which are stored in Medieval core collection. Five views from the Museo Civico Second floor cloister sequence are stored in Medieval. German-born photographer and scholar Max Hutzel (1911-Lazio Viterbo Viterbo Museo Civico32. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 Views of paintings (Middle Ages through 18th c.), frescoes, a tabernacle, coffin, sculpture reliefs, portal fragments, busts, sculpture, tapestry found in the Pinacoteca, Second floor gallery and Second floor cloister sequences. Antiquities: Many views of Etruscan and Roman fragments, sculpture, sarcophagi, pottery, masks, jewelry and other objects found in the Storeroom sequence (inventory numbers on back of prints), and the Cloister, Second floor Cloister, Valle Giulia, Sala Romana and Sala Etrusca sequences. General Notes: There are eight separate numerical sequences for this location. The cloister as an architectural structure, rather than museum site, is documented in the record and file for S. Maria della Verita, Cloister, all views of which are stored in Medieval core collection. Five views from the Museo Civico Second floor cloister sequence are stored in Medieval. German-born photographer and scholar Max Hutzel (1911-Pottery flowerpot, one hole in the bottom, tapered, foot, flower pot holder soil find ceramic pottery, hand-twisted pierced fried Flower pot of light red earthenware pierced leak hole in bottom stand ring rotations. Conical model on stand foot archeology Valckensteyn Poortugaal Albrandswaard indigenous pottery flower plant herb gardener kitchen Soil discovery: canal at kitchen castle Valckensteyn at Poortugaal now Albrandswaard 1961.Bowl in the Shape of a Ladle ca. 1770 In the style of Shunzan Japanese. Bowl in the Shape of a Ladle. In the style of Shunzan. Japan. ca. 1770. Seto ware, Oribe Revival type; glazed stoneware. Edo period (1615-1868). CeramicsVASO DE BRONCE. Location: MUSEO ARQUEOLOGICO-PREHISTORIA. GRANADA. SPAIN.Miniature Bottle 11th-late 15th century Chimú or Chancay. Miniature Bottle 308939Water Pot. Culture: Japan. Dimensions: H. 6 1/4 in. (15.9 cm); Diam. 4 1/4 in. (10.8 cm). Date: 18th century. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Flight Container for PoisonDartsTripod Vessel with Jaguar Head Feet. Culture: Costa Rica. Dimensions: Height: 10 5/8in. (27cm)Diameter: 11in. (27.9cm). Date: 9th-15th century. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Lamp, Anatolia; 1st - 4th century; Terracotta; 3 x 7 x 10 cm (1 3,16 x 2 3,4 x 3 15,16 in.)Pottery chamber pot with curved soul, bandoor, upright neck, pot holder sanitary earthenware ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, bottom, hand turned glazed baked Pottery chamber pot with curved bottom Standing sausage ear Ball-shaped shape with short cylindrical neck Outstanding top edge Kuil in the upper edge where the attachment of the ear is. Internally only glazed under the neck opening on the bottom. Externally glazed on the shoulder on one side Adhesion on the inside and outside Restoration is painted on color archeology underground pit Rotterdam City center Stadsdriehoek Groenendaal indigenous earthenware sleeping night room hygiene drains archaeological find in the soil Groenendaal on first 50 meters subway at 20 meters and 1 meter NAP found 1975-09 -9.Single Spout Strap Vessel with Attached Molded Figures. Lambayeque; North coast, Peru. Date: 1000-1476. Dimensions: H. 12.7 cm (5 in.). Ceramic and pigment. Origin: Peruvian North Coast. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA.Jug. Roman; Eastern Mediterranean, probably Syria. Date: 301 AD-400 AD. Dimensions: 13.3 × 7 × 5.7 cm (5 1/4 × 2 3/4 × 2 1/4 in.). Glass, mold-blown technique. Origin: Syria. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA. Author: ANCIENT ROMAN.Vase 1st century A.D. Roman. Vase 251439 Roman, Vase, 1st century A.D., Bronze, H.: 4 x 3 in. (10.2 x 7.6 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Rogers Fund, 1923 (23.160.105)GRAN RECIPIENTE CON CUATRO ASAS (DINOS) DE BRONCE. ROMANO. AJUAR. (DEPOSITO: MUSEO ARQUEOLOGICO PROVINCIAL DE CORDOBA).Naczynie. unknown, authorVase. Culture: China. Dimensions: H. 9 in. (22.9 cm); Diam. 5 5/8 in. (14.3 cm). Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.Bulbous bottle, belly bottle bottle holder soil find glass, bottom. Body with convex wall to convex shoulders with crack (about 6 cm) and rejuvenated (dm 5.5 - 2.4 cm) neck with imposed all-round flat glass thread and flattened lip archeology packagingPot with Stopper(Guri-Guri)Lamp, South Anatolia, Anatolia; 1st century B.C. - 4th century A.D; Terracotta; 4.5 x 7.8 x 16.5 cm (1 3,4 x 3 1,16 x 6 1,2 in.)Anonymous / 'Porphyry vase'. Ca. 1650. Wood, Porphyry. Museum: Museo del Prado, Madrid, España.Stoneware jug on pinched foot, slim model with brown engobe, pot jug crockery holder soil find ceramic stoneware clay engobe glaze salt glaze, hand-turned glazed baked Stoneware jug purple-brown outside engobe one standing ear nipped foot rings Two grooves over the shoulder. Slender model with slightly protruding neck archeology Capelle aan den IJssel House in Capelle castle indigenous pottery import drinking pouring tableware kitchenware tableware Soil discovery: canal south side house in Capelle ± 1395-1500 Capelle aan den IJssel 1963.Stem Cup ca. 100-300 Japan. Stem Cup. Japan. ca. 100-300. Earthenware. Yayoi period (ca. 300 B.C.-ca. A.D. 300). CeramicsLamp, North Africa; 1st - 4th century; Terracotta; 2.8 x 8.4 x 12 cm (1 1,8 x 3 5,16 x 4 3,4 in.)Pottery ointment jar, cylindrical model, white shard, yellow glazed, ointment jar pot holder soil find ceramic earthenware glaze lead glaze, hand-turned glazed baked Pottery ointment jar. Cylindrical model with shallow binding slot under the top edge and protruding ridge and necking above the foot White shard fully glazed dark yellow green in color. Here and there fine-meshed craquelé in the glaze Stand surface cut off and not finished archeology Rotterdam IJsselmonde health care pottery packing ointment care medication medicine craft pharmacy Soil discovery: Castle IJsselmonde pit 2 Rotterdam 1972.Lamp. UnknownGlass perfume bottle 2nd-3rd century A.D. Roman Small candlestick unguentarium.Colorless.Tubular rim folded out, over and pressed in to top of flaring mouth; tall cylindrical neck, tapering downwards, with slight indent around base; narrow sloping shoulder; low conical body; pushed-in bottom.Intact; pinprick bubbles; dulling, iridescence, and creamy weathering, with some soil encrustation on interior.. Glass perfume bottle 244645White ceramic vase, from Anyang, Henan, China. Chinese Civilisation, 14th-11th century BC.Campania Caserta Capua Museo Campano013. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 Medieval: Byzantine architectural fragments; parchment fragments with miniatures (12th century) from Montecassino; painted wooden crucifix (13th century); Carolingian crucifixes; Bishop's miter (11th century) of gold and silver damask; fresco (13th century). Post-medieval: Architecture (15th century). Formerly the Palazzo Antignano. Unusual Catalan/Moorish-style portal; Paintings on panel and canvas (15th-18th centuries); marble intarsia (16th century); marble sculpture: busts of Christ and Mary (17th century); sculpture of saints in marble and in wood (15th century); painted and gilded sculpture in wood; marble grave sculpture (16th century); sarcophagus with allegorical carvings; gold reliquary "Rosa d'Oro"; crucifix made of elephant tusk Specific Location: Pianterreno Antiquities: Italic sculpture (seated women holding babies); inscription. Photo campaign #1: 533 photos. Roman relief and sculpture; cinerary urns; Greek aLamp ca. 3rd-7th century A.D. Sasanian. Lamp. Sasanian. ca. 3rd-7th century A.D.. Ceramic. Sasanian. Mesopotamia, CtesiphonAmphoriskos (Container for Oil). Eastern Mediterranean. Date: 200 BC-1 BC. Dimensions: 12.1 × 7.6 × 7.6 cm (4 3/4 × 3 × 3 in.). Glass, core-formed technique. Origin: Eastern Mediterranean Region. Museum: The Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, USA. Author: Ancient Eastern Mediterranean.Vase 14th century Japan. Vase. Japan. 14th century. Clay with an inlaid design of white slip and touches of blue under a glaze clouded with white; (Korai type). CeramicsSitula Representing Isis and Nephthys. Egypt, Thebes, Late Period, 712-332 B.C.. Furnishings; Serviceware. BronzeLazio Viterbo Viterbo Museo Civico7. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 Views of paintings (Middle Ages through 18th c.), frescoes, a tabernacle, coffin, sculpture reliefs, portal fragments, busts, sculpture, tapestry found in the Pinacoteca, Second floor gallery and Second floor cloister sequences. Antiquities: Many views of Etruscan and Roman fragments, sculpture, sarcophagi, pottery, masks, jewelry and other objects found in the Storeroom sequence (inventory numbers on back of prints), and the Cloister, Second floor Cloister, Valle Giulia, Sala Romana and Sala Etrusca sequences. General Notes: There are eight separate numerical sequences for this location. The cloister as an architectural structure, rather than museum site, is documented in the record and file for S. Maria della Verita, Cloister, all views of which are stored in Medieval core collection. Five views from the Museo Civico Second floor cloister sequence are stored in Medieval. German-born photographer and scholar Max Hutzel (1911-1Part of a Forearm Defense (Vambrace) ca. 1450-70 Italian This is part of a large find of medieval armor discovered in 1840 in the ruins of the fortress of Chalcis, on the Greek island of Euboea (then a Venetian colony called Negroponte). The fortress had been captured and destroyed by the Turks in 1470. Now divided largely between the Ethnological Museum, Athens, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Chalcis hoard contains many rare and unusual elements of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century armor. Of particular importance are the variety of headpieces and the many fragments of brigandines (armor for the torso constructed of small plates riveted to layers of fabric), some of which retain portions of their original velvet covering. The Chalcis armor provides a unique picture of the armament used in the Aegean, one of the easternmost military outposts of the Venetian empire.. Part of a Forearm Defense (Vambrace) 23119Lazio Latina Sezze Antiquarium Comunale01. Hutzel, Max 1960-1990 German-born photographer and scholar Max Hutzel (1911-1988) photographed in Italy from the early 1960s until his death. The result of this project, referred to by Hutzel as Foto Arte Minore, is thorough documentation of art historical development in Italy up to the 18th century, including objects of the Etruscans and the Romans, as well as early Medieval, Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque monuments. Images are organized by geographic region in Italy, then by province, city, site complex and monument.Lidded Vessel. Guatemala, Maya, 300-500 CE. Ceramics. Slip-painted ceramic with post-fire pigment and incised decoration