2004
DOI: 10.1080/00672700409480387
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Islamic pottery in the Middle Nile

Abstract: The Islarnicperiod is the least studied in Nubian archaeology and its ceramics the least understood, although this is beginning to change with an increasing interest in study of the period in the Sudan its& Ertually no excavation orpublication ofpost-Christian sites hasyet been conducted, nor any publication ofpost-Christian ceramics even for the usualputpose of dating the site and its limited stratigraphhy. No hlamicpottery deveLopment-forms,fabrics, decoration, orgeogaphical distribution anddelimitation -has… Show more

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“…The surface is brown inside and black outside with traces of prominent burnishing. The technical properties as well as the surface treatment corresponds well with the description of common Islamic pottery found in Sudanese Nubia and dated from the 14 th to the 18 th centuries AD (Phillips 2004).…”
Section: Krp8 Areasupporting
confidence: 69%
“…The surface is brown inside and black outside with traces of prominent burnishing. The technical properties as well as the surface treatment corresponds well with the description of common Islamic pottery found in Sudanese Nubia and dated from the 14 th to the 18 th centuries AD (Phillips 2004).…”
Section: Krp8 Areasupporting
confidence: 69%