| THE
POTTERY OF MESSENE
The pottery of Messene follows the historical
course of the city itself since its establishment in the early
4th c. B.C. down to the Late Roman and Protobyzantine periods.
Especially interesting is the pottery of the Hellenistic era,
from about 320 B.C. to the time of Augustus, which follows
the various styles and the general trends of the period, without
loosing though its local characteristics. At the close of
the 4th c. B.C. we witness the death of the figural decoration
on pottery. In its place monochrome ware appears, either black
- or red glazed. The latter are also called Terra Sigillata
ware when they carry a stamped or applied decoration; they
are devided in western sigillata or Aretine ware (from Arezzo
in Italy) and in eastern or Pergamene ware (from Peregamon
in Asia Minor) where they appeared from about 150 B.C. to
50 B.C. They continued to be produced in Italy and the East
down to the 7th-8th c. A.D. A group of the latter is called
African ware because their main area of production was North
Africa fabricating vases and utensils of domestic use such
as shallow and deep plates and bowls. Also to the category
of the monochrome black-glazed ware belong the so-called Megarian
bowls, a type of mould made fine ware with relief foral and
figural decoration; a group of these bowls are called Homeric
because they carry scenes from the Epic (Iliad and Odyssey).
The Megarian bowls were being produced from about 250 to 100
B.C. and were very popular. The richly decorated pottery could
be devided in two main categories: a) the dark ground painted
and b) the light ground painted. In the first category belong
the West Slope ware which make their appearance in Attica
since the 4th c. B.C. and continue to be made in local workshops
down to the 2nd c. B.C. Vases in West Slope type with applied
relief decoration (“Plakettenvasen”) occur mainly in Crete
and also in South Italy and Sicily; some specimens have been
also found in Messene. |

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In
the category of the light ground painted ware belong: a) the
Lagynos Group which appears to the east of the Adriatic sea
around 150 B.C. (floral designs in black or brown colour are
placed on the white paint of the ground), and b) The Hadra
Ware of Alexandria (circa 260-210 B.C.) comprising mainly
hydrias with their body covered by white paint (and decorated
with polychrome patterns) or with yellow paint (and decorated
with dark patterns). These vases were often used as funerary
burns in tombs. |
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