1996
DOI: 10.1017/s0003598x00083009
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The Swahili and the Mediterranean worlds: pottery of the late Roman period from Zanzibar

Abstract: Mortimer Wheeler famously tied together the worlds of ancient Rome and ancient India by finding Roman ceramics stratified into levels at Arikamedu, in south India. Late Roman pottery from far down the East African coast now permits the same kind of matching link from the Mediterranean to a distant shore, this one in the Swahili world.

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Cited by 67 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Finds of Late Roman pottery in these deepest levels support this date and testify to the long-ranging connections of early Unguja Ukuu (Juma 1996). The ceramics from these levels, up to c. AD 950 are assigned to the ETT, although Juma has identified transitional features from earlier Kwale Ware (Juma 2004: 158).…”
Section: Unguja Ukuusupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Finds of Late Roman pottery in these deepest levels support this date and testify to the long-ranging connections of early Unguja Ukuu (Juma 1996). The ceramics from these levels, up to c. AD 950 are assigned to the ETT, although Juma has identified transitional features from earlier Kwale Ware (Juma 2004: 158).…”
Section: Unguja Ukuusupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Faunal remains are still focused on the same spectrum of wild species as in the LSA, but with increased emphasis on small bovids, reef fish and marine molluscs. Given the evidence for the arrival of Iron Age people at the nearby town site of Unguja Ukuu by the sixth century AD (Juma 1996(Juma , 2004, it seems possible that the reoccupation of Kuumbi Cave reflects a broader recolonisation of Unguja Island in the mid-first millennium AD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These have to some extent been mapped using resistivity survey and coring (Juma 2004), although the results were somewhat inconclusive and thus were used chiefly as a guide to the depth of deposits rather than as a means of understanding site layout. The emergent picture is of a site with rich archaeological deposits indicating occupation from at least the seventh, if not sixth, century AD (Juma 1996). It was involved with Indian Ocean trade from the start, as evidenced by the record of imported beads, glass and ceramics, as well as the presence of exotic plants (Boivin et al 2014: 558).…”
Section: Unguja Ukuumentioning
confidence: 99%