Fritware bowl, painted with a gray and white slip and in black, blue, and turquoise under a transparent glaze
Southern Russia or Kazakhstan; 14th century
H: 8.9; Diam: 19.1 cm
Inventory number 54/2000
Because of the motif and technique, this bowls is a “coarser” versions of the Sultanabad ware made in the Kashan region and must be considered provincial copies. Similar bowls have been excavated in Sarai, on the Volga River, one of the capitals of the Golden Horde. They should be dated to before 1395, when Timur’s troops destroyed the city, but there is still uncertainty about the site or sites where they were produced.
The bowl is decorated with a Chinese motif, a stylized lotus.
The bowl is decorated with a Chinese motif, a stylized lotus.
Ceramics
Earthenware frieze, with carved ornamentation painted in white, turquoise, and a manganese glaze
Fritware mihrab tile, molded and painted in a white slip and in blue, black, turquoise, and manganese under a transparent glaze
Bowl, reddish fritware painted in blue, turquoise, and olive under a greenish, transparent glaze
Fritware dish, molded and covered with green glaze. Celadon imitation