Specialized Pottery Production on Bronze Age Cyprus and Pottery Use-wear Analysis

Authors

  • Laurinda Dugay University of Melbourne

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v9i2.167

Keywords:

Mediterranean Archaeology, pottery, production, user-wear analysis

Abstract

Cypriot archaeological pottery analysis has been characterized largely by descriptive, classificatory and chronological research. Furthermore, early analyses were biased geographically towards the north of the island and were almost totally reliant on material excavated from tombs. This paper investigates the question of specialized pottery production for funerary internment. The clarification of Prehistoric Bronze Age (c. 2400-1700 BC) pottery production will help elucidate arguments for increasing social complexity which frequently incorporate the specialized production of funerary or ritual pottery. Use-wear analysis is proposed as the most appropriate means of investigating the question of the specialized production of funerary pottery. Red Polished Pottery from cemetery and settlement sites of the Prehistoric Bronze Age in Cyprus is studied and compared for the presence and patterning of use-wear. The results suggest a domestic origin for much of the Red Polished Pottery recovered from Prehistoric Bronze Age tombs, a result that offers a far greater corpus of potential information about society at this period than initially perceived. The implications of these results also affect currently proposed models of pottery production and social behaviour in funerary contexts.

Author Biography

  • Laurinda Dugay, University of Melbourne
    Laurinda Dugay is a PhD student in the Department of Classics and Archaeology at the University of Melbourne. Current research focuses on the Middle and Upper Euphrates Valley during the third millennium BC and is primarily concerned with exploring the material manifestations of divisions within society during this period; this work explores the concept of 'social complexity' through an examination of class division, stratification and elitism in death, and the extent to which this can be related to the socio-economic political state of the broader settlement. The author was involved in excavations at the PreBA site of the Marki Alonia in Cyprus from 1992-94, and since 1994 has also excavated and studied the pottery at the north Syrian site of Tell Ahmar. She has worked in Australia and on both Aboriginal and historical survey and excavation.

Published

1997-04-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Dugay, L. (1997). Specialized Pottery Production on Bronze Age Cyprus and Pottery Use-wear Analysis. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 9(2), 167-192. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v9i2.167