Morgantina Studies, Volume VI: The Hellenistic and Roman Fine Pottery

Morgantina Studies, Volume VI: The Hellenistic and Roman Fine Pottery

by Shelley C. Stone
Morgantina Studies, Volume VI: The Hellenistic and Roman Fine Pottery

Morgantina Studies, Volume VI: The Hellenistic and Roman Fine Pottery

by Shelley C. Stone

eBook

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Overview

Excavation of the ancient city of Morgantina in southeastern Sicily since 1955 has recovered an extraordinary quantity and variety of pottery, both locally made and imported. This volume presents the fine-ware pottery dating between the second half of the fourth century BCE, when Morgantina was a thriving inland center closely tied to the Hellenistic east through Syracuse, and the first half of the first century CE, when Morgantina had been reduced to a dwindling Roman provincial town that would soon be abandoned. Bearing gloss and often paint or relief, these fine ceramics were mostly tableware, and together they provide a well-defined picture of the evolving material culture of an important urban site over several centuries. And since virtually all these vessels come from dated deposits, this volume provides wide-ranging contributions to the chronology of Hellenistic and early Roman pottery.


An introductory chapter sketches out a comprehensive history of the city, discusses the many well-dated archaeological deposits that contained the excavated pottery, and defines the major fabrics of the ceramics found at the site. The bulk of the volume consists of a scholarly presentation of more than 1,500 pottery vessels, analyzing their shapes, fabrics, chronology, decoration, and techniques of fabrication.


This rich ceramic material includes significant bodies of Republican black-gloss and red-gloss vases, Sicilian polychrome ware, and Eastern Sigillata A, as well as early Italian terra sigillata, with numerous examples imported from Arezzo and other Italian centers, along with regional versions from Campania and elsewhere on Sicily. The relief ware includes important groups of third-century BCE medallion cups and hemispherical moldmade cups of the second and first centuries BCE.


Morgantina was also an active center of pottery production, and the debris from several workshops has been recovered, enabling Shelley Stone to reconstruct the working techniques and materials of the local craftsmen, the range of ceramics they produced, and how their products were influenced by pottery imported to the site from elsewhere on Sicily, the Italian mainland, and even more distant centers. The volume also presents new information about the sources of the clay used by the Morgantina potters, as revealed by X-ray fluorescence analysis of selected vases.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400845163
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 01/25/2015
Series: Publications of the Department of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University , #39
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 528
File size: 20 MB
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About the Author

Shelley C. Stone is professor of art history at California State University, Bakersfield, and has been a staff member of the excavations at Morgantina in Sicily since 1977. He has published on Greek and Roman pottery, Roman costume and sculpture, and Sicilian history. He is currently working on the publication of the Hellenistic and Roman plain pottery and the lamps found at Morgantina.

Table of Contents

  • Frontmatter, pg. i
  • Contents, pg. v
  • List of Text Figures, Tables, and Charts, pg. xiv
  • List of Plates, pg. xv
  • Editors’ Preface, pg. xx
  • Preface, pg. xxi
  • Bibliography and Abbreviations, pg. xxiii
  • 1. Introduction, pg. 3
  • 2. Historical Sketch of Morgantina, 340 BCE–ca. 50 CE, pg. 6
  • 3. The Pottery Deposits and Contexts, pg. 27
  • 4. Regional Pottery Production Represented at Morgantina: Fabrics and Gloss, pg. 72
  • 1. Introduction: Fine Pottery in Sicily in the Later 4th and 3rd Centuries BCE, pg. 81
  • 2. Black-Gloss Pottery, Including Vases with Overpainted Decoration, pg. 83
  • 3. East Sicilian Polychrome Wares, pg. 132
  • 1. Introduction: The 2nd and 1st Centuries to ca. 35 BCE, pg. 139
  • 2. Fine Wares of the First Half of the 2nd Century BCE, pg. 145
  • 3. Campana C Black-Gloss Pottery, pg. 146
  • 4. Other Black-Gloss and Miscellaneous Fine Wares, pg. 164
  • 5. Republican Red-Gloss Pottery of the 1st Century BCE, pg. 169
  • 6. Imported Eastern Sigillata A, pg. 193
  • 7. Decoration on Tablewares, ca. 211–ca. 35 BCE, pg. 200
  • 1. Introduction: The Last Decades of the 1st Century BCE and the First Half of the 1st Century CE, pg. 207
  • 2. Early Italian Terra Sigillata, pg. 209
  • 3. Regional Terra Sigillatas: Campanian Orange and Sicilian (?), pg. 223
  • 1. Introduction: Moldmade Pottery at Morgantina from the Late 4th Century BCE to the First Half of the 1st Century CE, pg. 229
  • 2. Medallion Wares, pg. 231
  • 3. Vessels with Relief Appliqués and Other Moldmade Ornament, pg. 270
  • 4. Moldmade Hemispherical Relief Cups (“Megarian Bowls”) and Related Relief Wares, pg. 274
  • 5. Early Italian Terra Sigillata Relief Wares, pg. 282
  • 6. Green-Glazed Wares, pg. 290
  • 1. Fabrics and Origins, pg. 291
  • 2. Chronology, pg. 294
  • 3. Shape Typology and Decoration, pg. 296
  • VII. Catalogue, pg. 305
  • Appendix 1: The Evidence for Pottery Manufacture at Morgantina from the Later 4th Century BCE to the 1st Century CE, pg. 408
  • Appendix 2: The Provenance of Ceramics at Morgantina from the 3rd Century BCe through the 1st Century Ce as Defined by Portable eDXRF Analysis, by Malia Johnson and Maury Morgenstein, pg. 416
  • Appendix 3: Concordance of Shapes Found at Morgantina with Those Commonly Found in the Tombs of the 4th and the First Half of the 3rd Century BCE on Lipari, pg. 451
  • Appendix 4: The Morgantina Silver Treasure, pg. 458
  • Concordance of Inventory Numbers, pg. 462
  • Subject Index, pg. 470
  • Index of Deposits and Contexts, pg. 484
  • Plates, pg. 486



What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"This is a magisterial work, huge in its scope, exhaustively documented, and thoroughly authoritative. By virtue of its size and the manner of its excavation, with context carefully recorded, this body of ceramics is one of the most important excavated in Sicily for the period. The book will be tremendously useful for those excavating and studying the ceramics of Sicilian sites; I venture to predict that it will become a bible, much like the famous Agora XII of Brian Sparkes and Lucy Talcott. Because Morgantina imported a variety of wares, it will also become a source of dated comparanda for sites in other parts of the Mediterranean. This is a welcome addition to the library of works that present large and well-dated collections of Greek and Roman pottery."—Susan I. Rotroff, Washington University in St. Louis

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