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From:UC Teece Museum of Classical Antiquities
Name/TitleBowl
About this objectThis Bronze Age knob lug bowl was found in a pit-tomb near Nicosia in Cyprus, and has been mended from fragments. It is a hemispherical clay bowl that has been covered in an orange-red slip that fired to black around the lip and on the inside. This bowl is one of the wider variations found in this tomb.
Vessels of this shape are often made by shaping clay around a gourd, another bowl or some other rounded object to give a regular shape. The knob lug is a small addition near the rim which acts as a handle or hanging point. The knob can be shaped around a stick or pierced to produce a hole used to hang the vessel.
Date Made21st Century BC
PeriodEarly Cypriote
Place MadeCyprus
Place NotesExcavated from Ayia Paraskevi, tomb 11
Medium and MaterialsCeramic: Pottery
Style and IconographyCypriote
Style and IconographyRed polished II
TechniqueMolding (forming)
TechniqueGlazing (coating process)
TechniqueSlab method (pottery technique)
MeasurementsHeight 84mm; Diameter 162mm
Subject and Association KeywordsMourning customs
Subject and Association KeywordsFood history
Named CollectionThe James Logie Memorial Collection, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Credit LineDonated by the Melbourne University Cyprus Expedition, care of Dr J.B. Hennessy, University of Sydney, 1973.
Object TypeFood Service Vessels
Object number128.73
Copyright LicenceAll rights reserved