Mons Claudianus : survey and excavation. Vol. 3. Ceramic vessels & related objects

Mons Claudianus : survey and excavation. Vol. 3. Ceramic vessels & related objects

Mons Claudianus : survey and excavation. Vol. 3. Ceramic vessels & related objects
2006ISBN 9782724704280
Format: BrochéLangue : Anglais

Mons Claudianus is the site of a major Roman quarry complex, situated in

the Eastern Desert of Egypt. The quarries, which were operated as an imperial

monopoly, produced a fine grey granodiorite which was used largely in prestige

imperial building projects in Rome. Once abandoned by Rome, the settlement lay largely

untouched, and in a superb state of preservation, until the advent of tourism on the Red

Sea coast in the 1980s. Seven seasons of work conducted between 1987 and 1993, produced

a detailed survey of the large quarry field and fortified settlement area, and excavations

undertaken to elucidate the functioning and chronology of the site. Among the major aims

was the construction of dated sequences for various classes of ceramic artefact, something

that had been sadly lacking for the earlier centuries of the Roman period in Egypt but which

is made possible at Mons Claudianus by the association of the ceramic materials with dated

ostraca.

The high status of the site is reflected in the range of materials represented. This report

provides a comprehensive account of the Egyptian and imported pottery and faience vessels,

vessel stoppers, ceramic lamps and small objects. The report on the vessels includes a detailed

description of fabric and forms, together with a dated catalogue. Quantified groups, ranging

from the mid-first through the early third century AD, chart the ceramic trends through time,

and are used to address broader issues, such as supply and demand, at the site. The report

on the pottery lamps includes a comprehensive catalogue, and presents a new dated typology

designed to be flexible enough to accommodate future discoveries, as well as fabric analysis

designed to establish provenance. A typological analysis of 273 vessel stoppers with their

inscriptions attempts to correlate stopper type with vessel contents, and from this draw broader

conclusions about food supply to Mons Claudianus. Finally, the group of terracotta and plaster

objects, though relatively small in number and fragmentary in condition, forms one of very

few well-dated collections of these materials published from Graeco-Roman Egypt.

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