Ancient Greek Pottery: Places Where They Were Found and Historical Contexts
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55640/jsshrf-06-05-14Keywords:
Ancient Greece, crafts, pottery, Greek vasesAbstract
This article includes a scientific analysis of Ancient Greece’s role in the development of humankind, the advancement of crafts and pottery, as well as the history and geographical distribution of Greek vases. The article provides detailed information about the ethnographic origins of Greek ceramic goods, the conditions of their production, their historical and geographical boundaries, and also about finds from tombs. The main purpose of the study is to examine the history of Greek vases and their relationship with other cultures. In this scientific work, the social, economic, and cultural significance of Greek vases is also considered.
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References
https://www.worldhistory.org/Greek_Pottery/
“History of ancient pottery”, Samuel Birch, New York, 1905, 30 b
“See for references to descriptions of tombs” Hermann, Lehrbuch d. Antiq.(1882), 377 b
“The Mycenaean Period: Recent Discoveries and Research. Athens: Hellenic Ministry of Culture.” J. D. S. Stamatakis (1878).
"Macpherson, Antiqs. of Kertch, passim" Macpherson, Duncan. Antiquities of Kertch, and Researches in the Cimmerian Bosphorus. London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1857.
R. H. Smith (1992). Greek Vase Painting: A New Perspective. New York: Cambridge University Press.
J. D. S. Stamatakis (1878). The Mycenaean Period: Recent Discoveries and Research. Athens: Hellenic Ministry of Culture.
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