Nabataean Jar with Trefoil Spout

£ 895.00

A finely moulded Nabataean terracotta jar, featuring an elongated pyriform body rising from a flat base. A long and narrow neck leads to a spout that flares out into a trefoil rim. A looped handle is attached to the neck and shoulder. Around the neck there is incised herringbone motif, providing an eye-catching detail.

SKU: NES-211
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Date: Circa 1st-3rd century AD
Provenance: From an important collection of Holy Land pottery formed pre 1988, thence by descent.
Condition: Very fine, completely intact. Signs of wear, consistent with age, such as pitting, discolouration and earthly encrustations.

The Nabataean tribes first encroached upon Jordan and the surrounding area sometime in the 6th century BC. Thought of originally as a nomadic people they settled in the area, existing as an autonomous kingdom until the 2nd century AD, when they were finally defeated by the Romans. Nabataean pottery can roughly be grouped into two large categories; Fine ware and course ware. These two groups were then split into subcategories. Fine ware Nabataean pottery, made exclusively in and around Petra, is categorised by its very thin walls (known as egg-shell pottery), its deep red colouring and painted floral patterns. Course ware remained thicker in its measurements and undecorated.

To discover more about Nabataean artistic production, visit our relevant post: Nabataean Art of the Stone City Dwellers.

Weight 761.3 g
Dimensions W 14.5 x H 25 cm
Pottery

Terracotta

Region

Near East (Western Asiatic)

Reference: For similar: Wein Museum, Item 166703

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