Terra sigillata (pottery style)

Esquema

Getty AAT: Styles, periods, and cultures by region

Jerarquía

Early Western World > Mediterranean (Early Western World) > <ancient Italian styles and periods> > ancient Italian pottery styles > Roman pottery styles

Descripción

Refers a style used in fine pottery of Italy, Gaul, and Germany, and throughout the Roman Empire from the first century BCE to the third century CE. It developed from the traditions of ancient Greek pottery in the use of calcitic clays rich in iron compounds to produce a glossy surface, but it differs from Greek pottery in employing a single-phase firing in an open kiln. It is characterized by its red color, smooth finish, and sometimes by decorations of stamped figures or patterns. The term was coined in the ninteenth century, and historically there has been disagreement regarding to which pottery it applies, stemming from various interpretations of the term as either "stamped earth," with reference to the stamped designs, or "sealed earth" with reference to an astringent, fatty, medicinal bole called "terra sigillata," from the island of Lemnos, that was thought to be the clay from which the pottery was made. Further confusion has surrounded the relationship of this term and "Samian ware" or "Samian."

Subcategorías

URI original del concepto

http://vocab.getty.edu/aat/300107376

Otros términos

  • Terra sigillata [es]
  • 印形裝飾赤陶 [zh]
  • terra sigillata [nl]
  • yìn xíng zhuāng shì chì táo [zh]
  • yin xing zhuang shi chi tao [zh]
  • yin hsing chuang shih ch'ih t'ao [zh]
  • 紅色細陶器 [zh]
  • 紅精陶器 [zh]