Table Of ContentEarly Islamic  Pottery 
Materials and Techniques 
Anne-Marie Keblow Bernsted
Contents 
First published 2003 by Archetype Publications Ltd. 
Archetype Publications Ltd. 
6 Fitzroy Square 
Preface  V 
London W1 T 5HJ 
www.archetype.co. uk  Acknowledgements  VI 
Tel:  44(207) 380 0800  Introduction  VII 
Fax:  44(207) 380 0500 
Ceramic raw materials and techniques 
Note: The right of Anne-Marie Keblow Bernsted to be identified as the author  Unglazed, pre-Islamic pottery 
of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs 
Early glazes 
and Patents _Act 1988. 
2 
White-ground decoration 
© 2003 Anne-Marie Keblow Bernsted  4 
Inglaze colours 
7 
ISBN 1-873132-98-0  Lustre ware 
11 
Slip-painted ware (Nishapur type) 
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data 
19 
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.  Slip-painted ware (Garms type) 
23 
Fritware 
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a 
28 
retrieval  system,  or  transmitted,  in  any  form  or by  any  means,  electronic,  Silhouette ware 
mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission  39 
Raqqa ware 
of the publishers. 
40 
Laqabi ware 
Front  cover  illustration:  Fritware  tile  covered with cobalt blue glaze  and  42 
Relief-moulded ware 
decorated with white lead, iron oxide and gold leaf (diameter: 20.1  cm). Tile 
44 
deposited at The David Collection 45/1986. (Photo: A.M. Keblow Bernsted)  Minai ware 
Back cover illustrations:  Fritware dish painted with chromite black under  so 
Lajvardina ware 
clear copper turquoise alkaline glaze (height: 10.5 cm; diameter 37.0 cm). The 
David Collection 5/1970. Sketch of fritware dish DS 5/1970. (Photo and sketch:  Kilns  53 
A.M. Keblow Bernsted) 
Chemical and petrographic investigation of the pottery  61 
61 
Techniques and methods 
Printed on acid-free paper.  62 
Clay properties 
63 
Designed and typeset by PDQ Digital Solutions Ltd., Bungay, Suffolk  The Iraqi ware 
Printed and bound in Great Britain  65 
The Iraqi clay 
by Henry Ling Ltd., The Dorset Press, Dorchester 
68 
The Egyptian ware
Preface 
The Egyptian clay  70  The aim of this book is to make the pottery of the early  derived from investigations of Islamic pottery glazes and 
Islam.ic period accessible to those who might be interested  pigments. 
The Syrian ware  73 
i11  the ceramic techniques, including those applying to  In the second section - Kilns - a kiln characteristic of 
The Syrian clay  78 
pigments, glazes and body. This pottery is  today almost  the period is described. 
The Persian ware  79  t:xclusively found in museums and thus can usually be  The third section - Chemical and petrographic investi 
enjoyed by the museum visitor only at a distance.  gation  ef the pottery - addresses  those readers who are 
The Persian clay  82 
Since  1985, in  my  role  as  conservator at Davids  particularly interested in ceramic materials in the form 
Topography_ and occurrence of ceramic raw materials  87  Samling (The David Collection, Copenhagen), I have  of the clay itself, or rather, the fired clay. The various 
been responsible for the care of the collection of Islamic  bodies and the development from the early yellow and 
Iraq  87 
pottery, which has inevitably resulted in a deeper interest  red earthenware through the light-brown quartz pottery 
Egypt  89  in its technical composition. Over the years I have given  to the white fritware are described as well as tempering, 
Syria  90  various  conducted tours  of Davids  Sarnling, covering  grain  size,  levigation,  matrix  mineralogy  and  firing 
pottery raw materials and production techniques. These  temperature. 
Iran  91 
tours have proved to be of great interest to potters and  The fourth and final section of the book provides 
Bibliography  95  kindred souls, and it is to such readers, after a brief intro  information on the geographical occurrence of ceramic 
duction, that the first section of the book - Ceramic raw  raw materials in the areas involved in the production of 
Subject index  99 
111aterials and techniques - in particular should appeal. This  Islamic pottery: Iraq, Egypt, Syria and Iran. 
Place-name index  IOI 
section provides an insight into ceramic traditions with  It is thus primarily technological investigations that 
the  aid  of,  among  other  things,  a  medieval  Persian  have been used to characterize the pottery; the historical 
manuscript. The glaze recipes and methods of producing  background has been treated cursorily, decoration being 
pigments described are compared with the information  mentioned only when it is related to technique. 
V
Acknowledgements  Introduction 
My  heartfelt  thanks  go  to  those  foundations  whose  Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts); Haldis Johanne  There is a long, deep-rooted tradition behind the classi  may  thus be compared to  the pigments employed in 
financial  support have  secured the publication of this  Bollingberg  (Geological  Institute,  University  of  fication of archaeological pottery from the Middle East  painting.  The  lustre  pigments,  on  the  other  hand, 
work: H0jesteretssagforer C. L. Davids Legat for Sl:egt og  Copenhagen);  J0rn  Bredal-J0rgensen  (The  Royal  on  the  basis  of style,  which  is  to  say  form  and  consisted of very small, colloidal particles of the elements 
Venner,  Grosserer L.  F  Foghts  Fond, Becket-Fonden,  Danish  Academy  of  Fine  Arts);  Snorre  L;ess0e  decoration. In  contrast, technical investigations of the  gold, copper and silver. 
Augustinus Fonden and Velux Fonden af 1981.  Stephensen (Danmarks Design Skole) and Lucie Witte  raw  materials  of  this  pottery  on  a  chemical  and  The  quartz-enriched  white  clay  with  added  frit 
I also wish to extend my gratitude to the following  (Carsten Niebuhr Institute, University of Copenhagen).  mineralogical basis have played a somewhat lesser role.  (fused and crushed mixture of glaze components) - the 
who have kindly contributed advice, support, informa  Leica Microsystems A/S provided generous assistance  This book aims to address the latter deficiency- to give  so-called quartz-frit pottery or fritware - was an innova 
tion  and  pr<?,Qf-reading:  Gjerl0ff Roed  (formerly  of  with digital camera equipment.  the  reader insight into  the ceramic  glazes, colouring  tion in the early Islamic period. However, it could be 
Royal Scandinavia A/S); P. J.  Riis  (formerly  of The  I  am  grateful  to The David  Collection and The  matters and paste materials and to augment this with a  said that it was a rediscovery and further development of 
National  Museum  of Denmark);  Mirjam  Gelfer  National  Museum  of Denmark for  allowing  me  to  closer evaluation of the early Islamic ceramic material  the related quartz-frit pottery and fritware of antiquity 
J0rgensen  (The Danish Museum of Decorative Art);  photograph items from their collections and make use  from the 9th to the 14th centuries found during exca  which, with its white ceramic paste, occupied a special 
Claus-Peter  Haase  (Museum  for  Islamische  Kunst,  of samples. My thanks also to those private collectors of  vations in the Middle East.  position  in  respect  of material  and  technology. The 
Berlin);  Ole  Bj0rn  Hansen  (The  Royal  Danish  Islamic pottery who allowed me to use samples.  The production of pottery has, over several millennia  technique, which was employed in the Middle Eastern 
Academy of Fine Arts); Niels L0nsmann Iversen (The  My thanks also to the translator, Peter Crabb.  and in  most cultures, been a very important cultural  cultural field from the 7th century BC, has survived in 
activity,  rich  in  tradition.  Glazes, slips  and  the  many  Iran to the present day. 
Anne-Marie Keblow Bernsted  possibilities  of clay  were  already  known  to  several  An  outstanding  source  treating  the  ceramic  raw 
ancient  peoples,  among  them  the  Egyptians  and  materials and production methods of the Middle East is 
Mesopotamians. At the beginning of the Islannc period  the  700-year-old  Persian  manuscript  dated  1301,  in 
(AD  622), Muslim  potters  created  colourful  ceramic  which Abu'! Qasim, a member of the renowned Persian 
works of art, which although they built on ancient, pre  fannly of potters Abu Tahir from Kashan, gives an account 
Islamic  traditions, were  nevertheless  stylistically  quite  of the potters' traditions of the time. The manuscript was 
independent. The  potters  also  developed  many  new  translated in 1935 from Persian to German by H. Ritter, 
ceramic traditions requiring considerable technological  J. Ruska and R. Winderlich, and in 1973 from Persian to 
insight and hard-won experience.  English by J. W Allan. It will in this book be adduced as 
The basis for the colours of the Islamic glazes and  a living picture of the early Islamic  ceramic tradition, 
slips  was  the  inorganic  pigments,  in  contrast  to  the  which was of such great importance for the development 
organic pigments (carbon compounds), which were not  of pottery far  beyond  the  Islamic  sphere, and  which 
suitable as  ceramic colourings since they burned away  reached Europe via Muslim Spain. 
leaving  no  colour.  The  inorganic  pigments  were  In the quotations from Abu'l Qasim, variant readings 
normally based on the elements cobalt, iron, chromium,  or additional comments from a later recension (1583) are 
manganese, copper, arsenic, tin, calcium and antimony, of  placed within round brackets, while the present author's 
which  the  three  last  also  served  to  impart  opacity.  comments are placed within square brackets. The two 
Although  these  mineral  ceramic  colouring  matter  translations  are  not  quoted  verbatim,  but  have  been 
should  preferably  give  a  bright  colour  to  the  glaze,  amalgamated and in one instance re-evaluated without 
several still remained after firing as unmelted grains and  reference to the original Persian. 
VI  VII
KAZAKHSTAN 
CENTRAL 
CAUCASUI  ASIA 
BLACK SEA 
Bukhara 
BULGARIA  •  • Samarqand 
• Merv 
,  } • l~b.riz 
• Gurgan 
~1'1'11S  • Mashhad  I 
i  li 
• Konya  Hisar ... • Teheran  •  ~5  /1 
Aleppo  •  Nishapur  • 
•  •  Rayy  Kabul 
d  Tell  nise  T.1kht-i Sulayman  IRAN  Haluane  ,f  • Herat 
•  •Qum  •Tabas~ 
Ho  1\  Hamadan  ... • Kashan 
••Guran  Giyan  •  eQamsar  eAnarak 
CYPRUS  ~  Sialk..  •  N ,. 
~  • Damascus  •• susa  •  Natanz•  a in  •Rum 
MEDITERRANEAN SEA  /0  lsfahan  • Kandahar 
•  •Yazd 
l- .J  •  Semirom  •  • Gujahr 
Jerusalem  Taft 
•Haruz 
Fars 
•Kirman 
••• Persepolis 
lndus 
• Shiraz  • Qahrud 
SAUDI 
ARABIA  BALUCHISTAN 
• Medina 
ARABIAN SEA 
UPPER EGYPT 
The Islamic World 
YEMEN 
... Ancient site 
VIII  IX
Ceramic  raw  materials  and 
techniques 
Unglazed, pre-Islamic pottery  was  known  from  the  ancient  Egyptian  and 
Mesopotamia and Iran had, like ancient Egypt, a pottery  Mesopotamian quartz pottery. The glazes  consisted at 
tradition covering thousands of years. From the onset of  that time of turquoise alkaline glazes or green, yellow 
the 6th millennium BC, pottery that had merely been  and light brown lead glazes. It is, however, only at the 
,1ir-dried was decorated with a pigmented clay slip that  beginning of the  Islamic  period that  coloured  glazes 
was fired on during the subsequent firing of the body - attain great importance for ceramic decoration. 
this was  the most widespread decoration technique in  In 749, the Umayyad Dynasty was replaced by that 
antiquity.The colour palette consisted ofblack to brown,  of the Abbasids. The capital was  transferred from the 
red and white mineral compounds.  late Classical ambience of Damascus to Baghdad, which 
The  clay  body  was,  however,  sometimes  first  was  founded according to  Oriental tradition. At the 
decorated with the pigmented clay slip after it had been  beginning of the 9th century, the Caliphate moved to 
fired. The binder for this slip consisted of a mixture of  Samarra, which lay north of Baghdad on the east bank 
plaster and animal glue. The technique allowed a much  of the Tigris, but the city was the capital and seat of 
greater selection of colours, but because the decoration  government for only a short period. The seat of the 
was not fired on, it was not so durable. In this case the  caliph was restored to Baghdad until the Abbasids lost 
pigments consisted of yellow, green and blue, in addition  control following the Mongol destruction in 1258. 
to black to brown, red and white mineral compounds.  In Baghdad and Samarra, ceramic art developed quite 
Occupying a position between decoration with clay  its  own  style. Excavations  of Abbasid  Samarra  have 
slip  and  true  glaze  was  an  extremely  fine,  levigated  yielded important finds of the tin-glazed pottery of the 
'gloss',  which  was  even  finer  than  clay  slip.  Gloss  times and of imported Chinese T'ang wares (618-907); 
decoration was, like the clay wash, fired on at a relatively  the  local  tin-glazed  pottery  is  entirely  Islamic  in 
low temperature, in contrast to the glazes, which were  character in respect of form, decoration and paste. The 
fused on at high temperatures. The gloss technique was  pottery  had,  in  contrast  to  Chinese  stoneware  and 
already  known  to  Mesopotamian  potters  of the  5th  porcelain, a fine,  dense, light brown to  ochre yellow 
millennium BC. Knowledge of the technique was, how  calcareous  body corresponding to  the clay  along the 
ever, apparently lost, until it resurfaced in Crete about  rivers Euphrates and Tigris. The earliest Mesopotamian 
two and a half millennia later. The colours used were red,  pottery from the 6th and 5th millennia had a clay make 
brown and black.  up  that was  chemically very much like  that of early 
Islamic Iraqi pottery. In antiquity, the clay was either used 
Early glazes  as it was, or finely levigated to remove impurities, as in 
The production of glazes with inorganic pigments that  the early Islamic period, when the levigated clay was 
did not burn off colourlessly like the organic pigments  sometimes tempered with finely crushed quartz sand.
Early Islamic Pottery  Ceramic raw materials and techniques 
(b) 
Figure 1 (a) Earthenware bowl painted with cobalt blue on an opague, white tin glaze (height: 5.5 cm; diameter: 20.5 cm). 
Iraq, 9th century. DS 21/1965. (b) Sketch of the bowl profile. (Photo and sketch: A. M. Keblow Bernsted.) 
Crushed alkaline glass frit was then added to make the  The technique  of making the  clear glazes  opaque 
paste sinter at relatively low temperature. In this way a  with tin oxide was, it would seem, not known until the 
sintered and strong clay ware was obtained, based on the  9th century. 
Figure 2 Scatter plot of tin-lead glaze painted with cobalt (from a fragment of the same type as DS 21/1965). (Nationalmuseets 
local Iraqi clay.  Although tin was one of the ancient metals, it was a 
Bevaringssektion, U Schnell.) 
The potters, over several  thousand  years,  obtained  rare one. Its use goes back to the time when people learnt 
their clay from an area  of alluvial plain dominated by  to make bronze and discovered that by adding a little tin,  pottery which, with a clear glaze, could make do with a  The tin  glaze  was  a raw  glaze  that was  relatively 
calcareous, loose sediments deposited by the Euphrates  the  properties  of copper could  be  improved,  thereby  single firing. The fired clay body reveals a well-sintered  simple to produce in that crushed quartz and flint were 
and Tigris. Besides the alluvial clay, there were extensive  obtaining a new metal superior to the known metals. Tin  paste, and that the firing temperature must have been in  finely ground and pasted in water with a certain amount 
tracts of mud here and the characteristic saline sabkas,  ore was presumably at that time obtained via the caravan  the range 900-1050°C.  of colloidal, very fine-grained, pale clay substance with 
which to the south stood in contrast to the limestone al  route from Persia and from Syria, whereas much later, 
Hajara outcrops which have always been so characteristic  both tin and lead ores were brought by sea from Burma 
of the area.  and Malaysia to the ore-poor Abbasid Iraqi plains. 
Figure  1  shows  the  9th-century  fully  developed 
White-ground decoration  milky white tin glaze with homogeneously distributed 
From the Abbasid period we have the first attempts at  tin particles and blue decoration. A preliminary, biscuit, 
decoration on a white ground. The first white glazes - firing removed water and volatile impurities from the 
which were actually grey-white - consisted rather of a  body and thus provided a stable base onto which a slip 
pale quartz-rich clay engobe covered by a transparent  could be applied, but was primarily necessary because of 
lead  glaze,  the  matrix  consisting  of alluvial  clay. The  differential shrinkage ofbody and glaze.The biscuit-fired 
decoration, as  known  from  Basra  and  Baghdad, was  bowl was dipped in tin glaze, which could then adhere 
executed in the so-called 'splash' technique and restricted  in a thick layer. On the dry, but still unfired tin glaze, 
to green and yellow-brown colours. From here, grey  decoration was carried out in the blue-colouring cobalt 
white  glazes  are  also  known,  which  on  account  of  pigment, suspended in water, where the glaze material 
underfiring had retained a mass  of air bubbles in the  practically sucked in the colour. After this, the object 
melt. The glazes were thus not fully fused because they  with tin glaze  and inglaze  decoration was  fired  for a  Figure 3 (a) Cross-section of tin glaze. Tin oxide appears as grains in the raw glaze. Natural size of section 1 mm (from a 
did not receive sufficient heat, giving an opaque effect.  second time, making it  more costly  to  produce  than  fragment of the same type as DS 21/1965). (b) Sketch of cross-section. (Photo and sketch: A. M. Keblow Bernsted.) 
3 
2
Early Islamic Pottery  Ceramic raw materials and techniques 
Figure 4 Detail of cobalt 
Figure 5 (a) Cross-section of cobalt blue inglaze decoration. Natural size of section 1 mm (from a fragment of the same type 
blue inglaze decoration. 
:1s OS 21/1965). (b) Sketch of cross-section. (Photo and sketch: A. M. Keblow Bernsted.) 
DS 21/1965. (Photo: 
A. M. Keblow Bernsted.) 
the  form  of trace  element  concentrations  in  other  occurrence of cobalt ore, like tin and lead ores, has been 
the  addition  of tin  oxide.  The  glaze  was  thus  an  strong oxidation the cobalt was transformed into cobalt  minerals.  Moreover,  blue  glass  beads  coloured  with  very limited. 
aluminium-rich  smelt  which  in  itself was  fluid. The  oxide. The oxide obtained in this way, i.e. divalent and  cobalt from the year 2250 have been found in ancient  For  the  Iraqi  blue-decorated  pottery  of the  early 
addition  of finely  ground quartz  and  flint  raised  the  trivalent cobalt oxide in varying ratios, was a grey-black  Iran, which was apparently at that time self-sufficient in  Islamic  period, cobalt  was  obtained from  Iran  or the 
viscosity of the glaze. But this  tin glaze was in reality  powder,  the  so-called  zciffer,  which  should  not  be  this colouring matter. From Eridu in Iraq around 2000  Caucasus, where there were rich deposits. Even in our 
often a lead-tin glaze, since  roasting tin alone proved  confused with the pigment Egyptian blue, which was a  BC, cobalt-coloured glass  is  likewise  known, but the  times, cobalt has been reported from Iraq only in trace 
difficult  because  it  had  a  tendency  to  scorify  to  an  copper compound (alkaline calcium cuprisilicate).  element concentrations, where the country adjoins Syria 
unattractive  grey  powder.  Tin  was  therefore  often  The zaffer, i.e. the pure metal oxide, was commonly  and Jordan and in the south, Saudi Arabia. Cobalt was 
compounded with lead (see Fig. 2, p. 3). By mixing the  used as a blue pigment on the white tin glaze of the  thus a very expensive colouring matter. It does not occur 
two metals, roughly in the ratio two parts tin to one part  Abbasid  Islamic  pottery,  whereas  the  deep  blue  naturally in the native state, but is bound to other ores, 
lead, a eutectic mixture was  obtained with a melting  underglaze  colour  smalt  (potassium  cobaltosilicate),  including those of copper and nickel, in which the cobalt 
point that was lower than that of any other mixture of  which  was  used  some  centuries  later,  was  a  fritted  commonly makes up only about 25 g per ton of ore. 
the two metals, while the oxide mixture became a white  product consisting of a mixture of zaffer and a flux in the  In addition to the blue inglaze colour, the fresh green 
powder, 'tin  ash'. By  adding tin  oxide, owing to  the  form  of a clear alkaline  glaze. When cobalt oxide  or  chromic oxide (Cr20 3)  is also seen in the Abbasid tin 
limited miscibility of the tin oxide phase with the other  other colouring oxides were fritted, a greater range of  glazed  pottery, where  it  gave  yellowish  grass-greens, 
glaze  components,  a  milky  white  glaze  with  good  shades  was  obtained  within  each  colour  group,  often  somewhat  dull  green  colours  (Fig.  6).  The 
opacity, in which the tin oxide was present in granular  depending on the degree of grinding.  colouring matter could in principle be produced from 
form, was attained (see Fig. 3, p. 3).  When zaffer was used alone, however, the strength of  the mineral chromite (FeCr20 4), which formed a slag 
Tin glaze also formed the substrate for the overglaze  the colour was so great that it was difficult to achieve an  like product when it was roasted with potassium carbon 
enamel colours and is further described in that context  even distribution without blue spots in the glaze (Fig. 4).  ate and then, under reduction with sulphur or charcoal 
on p. 49.  The highly concentrated zaffer, which was applied as a  in  the  temperature  range  500--700°C. The  resulting 
paste, was absorbed by the glaze during the firing process  product was filtered and washed, after which the matt 
Inglaze colours  (Fig. 5).  green, insoluble chromic oxide remained as a precipitate. 
The blue inglaze pigment was produced from cobalt ores,  The  earliest  known  examples  of decoration  with  Chromium, besides  copper, imparted colour to green 
for example cobalt glance, cobaltite, by roasting them in  cobalt were Egyptian statuettes, ornaments and amulets  Figure 6 Earthenware bowl painted with cobalt blue on an  glazes,  but  owing  to  its  refractoriness,  chromium 
a  plentiful  supply  of  air. When  cobaltite  (cobalt  from  2680  to  2530  BC. The  colouring  matter  was  opaque, white tin glaze and with chrome green splashing  pigments had as a rule greater opacity - unlike copper 
arsenosulphide, CoAsS) was roasted at 900°C, the volatile  presumably at that time imported from Iran, since cobalt  (height: 6.0 cm; diameter: 20.0 cm). Iraq, 9th century.  pigments which gave the pure, clear, cool bluish-green 
arsenic and sulphur could be driven off, and under the  ores are largely unknown from Egypt and then only in  DS 25/1973. (Photo: A. M. Keblow Bernsted.)  or  greenish-blue  colours  known  particularly  from 
5 
4
Early Islamic Pottery  Ceramic raw materials and techniques 
dense  form of the  mineral, and glazed with  copper  The  earliest  traces  of this  unusual  technique  can  be 
coloured blue-greenish alkaline  silicate  glass. The first  traced  back  to  Attica  in  Ancient  Greece,  where 
true quartz pottery glazed with the same blue-greenish  decoration of metallic copper in colloidal dispersion was 
compound,  copper  frit,  comes  from  the  Neqade  I  fired  in  a  reducing  atmosphere  onto  a  clay  slip  of 
culture 3500-3200 BC and from  the year 2700 BC,  kaolinite.  The  copper-red  colour,  which  could  be 
when  large  quantities  of quartz  pottery  glazed  with  intensified  with  iron  oxide,  appeared  after  firing  as 
copper frit  were  produced, for,  among  other places,  diffuse  pigment particles  with red  centres  of metallic 
Ujoser's burial chamber in the step pyramid at Saqqara.  copper. 
Ancient  Egypt  was  abundantly  self-sufficient  in  The technique (Fig. 8), which in the Islamic cultural 
copper ore. Copper mines were found in several places  sphere is presumed to have originated with the Egyptian 
including Sinai's Wadi Maghagha and along the east coast  glass-makers, turns up again after the fall of the Abbasid 
in Wadi  Dara and Wadi  Gasus.  In  other parts  of the  Empire in Fa timid (909-1171) Egypt. Here the city of 
:mcient world, the  mountains  of Oman also  supplied  al-Qahira  (present-day  Cairo)  was  founded. The  city 
copper ore, which was transformed into copper bars that  became the capital of the new dynasty, and centred in al 
were  transported to  the  coast  and  thence shipped to  Fustat, the oldest part of the city where the first Egyptian 
cps 
Mesopotamia.  mosque was built, the potters continued the  tradition 
In the early Islamic period, both cobalt and copper  inherited  from  Basra,  Baghdad  and  Samarra.  From 
K 
ore were imported to Iraq from Persia.According to the  Fustat, lustre decoration is  known on transparent lead 
Arab geographer Ibn Hawqal, at that time the Persian  and alkaline glazes over a white quartz-rich clay slip and 
copper  mines  at  Kashan, Tus,  Kirman, Teheran  and  on opaque lead-tin raw glazes.The clay paste was oflocal 
lsfahan, and in Bukhara and Fergana (Uzbekistan) were  origin. The paste materials range here from the yellow 
the  most important for  the Arabian  caliphs. The flat  calcareous  clay  (brick earth)  and deep-red, lime-poor 
Iraqi plain was, unlike mountainous Persia, not rich in  mud of the Egyptian Nile to Nile clay enriched with 
Figure 7 (a) Fragment of 
ore, although copper mines were known there as early 
4  earthenware painted with 
as 1600 BC at what is now Kirkuk on the Great Zab 
cobalt blue and copper-green 
u  b  blue on an opaque, white tin  nver. 
glaze. DS Sf/1985. (b) Detail of  Despite the fact that Syria had such rich deposits of 
DS Sf/1985.  copper ore at Retenu and Djahi that they could export 
2 
(Photo:A. M. Keblow Bernsted.) 
some  of the  production in  the  early  Islamic  period, 
(c) Energy-dispersive X-ray 
Persia was at that time probably the main supplier in the 
analysis (EDX) of greenish 
Pb  entire  Middle  East  of the  cobalt  and  copper  glaze 
Pi?  Pb  (green-blue) painting on tin 
Pb  Pb  .  glaze. Detail of DS Sf/ 1985,  pigments that were in demand everywhere. 
(Nationalmuseets  Chromium ore occurred in the rocks found through 
0  5  10  15 
(c)  Energy (keV)  Bevaringssektion, U Schnell.)  out the whole of Syria, Iraq and Iran. Chromium is often 
found naturally bound to iron.The black mineral chrome 
ancient Egyptian quartz pottery and from  12th- and  about  850-900°C  to  sintered  crystalline  aggregates  ironstone or chromite (FeCr204)  is the only chromium 
13th-century Seljuk quartz-frit pottery and fritware.The  rather than glass. The balls of pigment could later be put  ore of importance. 
Abbasid pottery also makes use of the cool green-blue  into clay crucibles and melted to a glass. The red-hot 
copper pigment (Fig. 7 a-c).  glass melt was shock-cooled in cold water and deposited  Lustre ware 
When copper was  to be extracted from sulphurous  as the pigment powder that could be used for ceramic  Under the Abbasid  Caliphate in the 9th century, the 
ores, the sulphides had first, as with cobalt ores, to be  decoration, giving the characteristic green-blue colour.  Iraqi potters had also  introduced what was known as 
transformed  into  oxides  by  roasting.  Copper  oxide  The  earliest  use  of  copper  glaze  is  found  in  lustre pottery, the metallic, lustrous decoration of which 
(cupric oxide), sand, soda, and lime were mixed, as was  prehistoric Egyptian beads from  4400-3800, found at  consisted  of small  colloidal  particles  of the  elements 
Figure 8 Earthenware dish painted with red-brown lustre 
the  practice  since  Egyptian  antiquity, and  made  into  the cemetery of the Badari folk south of Asyut. The  gold, silver and copper. 
on an opaque, white tin glaze. Egypt, 11th century to first 
balls,  the  so-called  Egyptian  blue,  alkaline  calcium  beads  were  made  from  the  mineral  talc  (hydrated  The  lustre  technique  was  one  of  the  major  half of the 12th century. DS 48/1977. 
cuprisilicate (CaSi20 5. CuSi20 5). The mix was roasted at  magnesium silicate) in the form of steatite, which is a  contributions to ceramic art in the early Islamic period.  (Photo:A. M. Keblow Bernsted.) 
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