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202:('puncturing' according to some writers - not a completely accurate description of the process, as it appears to have been the potters' intention not to 'puncture' or 'pierce' the vessel wall, but merely to make a series of small impressions or dents). These designs appear in the form of lines, stripes, triangles, squares and - very occasionally - circles. Vessels of Tell el-Yehudiyeh Ware frequently have a dark surface (the burnished slip varying from brownish black, to grey, to yellowish), the multiple holes often being filled with
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Tell el-Yehudiyeh Ware is characterised by its distinctive mode of decoration, applied after slipping and burnishing, and created by repeatedly "pricking" the surface of the vessel with a small sharp object to create a large variety of
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Many ceramicists see the form of the Tell el-Yehudiyeh juglet as being firmly grounded in earlier
Canaanite ceramic traditions, able to be traced back to earlier prototypes such as the juglets from Tomb A at
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The ware first appears in strata dating to the MBIIA period, reaching the peak of its popularity in the MBIIB-C periods when it is encountered very frequently in contemporaneous
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Tell el-Yehudiyeh Ware is primarily seen in the form of juglets, but also includes a large variety of zoomorphic (animal-shaped) vessels and even some shaped like fruit.
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Tell el-Yehudiyeh Ware forms a very useful diagnostic indicator for the MBIIB-C period especially. In the Nile delta it is often considered to mark the presence of the
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Ovoid jug featuring the ornamental engravings filled with white coating characteristic of the Tell el-Yahudiyeh Ware style. Found by
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242:(though primarily in the eastern Nile Delta of Egypt), the southern portion of Canaan, the north coast of Canaan, the
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298:"Archäologischer Befund und historische Interpretation am Beispiel der Tell el-Yahudiyeh-Ware", in S. Schoske (ed.),
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and Syrian coasts and the island of Cyprus (primarily the eastern regions). Not presently found in inland Syria.
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used in Tell el-Yehudiyeh Ware is normally grey or light-brown in colour, with numerous gritty inclusions.
124:
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30:
305:, "The Center of Hyksos Rule: Avaris (Tell el-Dab'a) - Tell el-Yahudiya Ware", in Oren, E. (ed.),
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and Delta sites. The last vestigial expressions of this ware die out during the LBI period.
8:
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Negbi, Ora , "Cypriote
Imitations of Tell el-Yahudiyeh Ware from Toumba tou Skourou",
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or lime, the contrasting white material making the surface design even more dramatic.
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337:, London: School of Archaeology, University College and Bernard Quaritch, 1906.
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Zevulun, U. , "Tell el-Yahudiyeh
Juglets from a Potter’s Refuse Pit at Afula",
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309:, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, pp. 91–96, fig.4.4-4.7.
258:/Tel Ashkelon, where such ware was produced and used for dating purposes
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Akten Des
Vierten Internationalen Ă„gyptologen-Kongresses, Munchen 1985
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21 (1990), pp. 174–190, p.*107. (Hebrew with
English summary).
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Bietak, Manfred , "Tell el-Jahudiyeh-Keramik", LdÄ VI, pp.335-348.
119:(often abbreviated TEY) is a distinctive ceramic ware of the late
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sites. It was first recognised as a distinctive ware by Sir
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The Hyksos: New
Historical and Archaeological Perspectives
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222:, Thebes, Deir el-Bahri, Tomb of Iuy. c. 1700 BC
302:, Band 2, , Hamburg: Helmut Buske, pp.7-34.
143:, and is also found in a large number of
66:Learn how and when to remove this message
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155:during his excavation of the type site.
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29:This article includes a list of general
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90:necropolis in 1923, on display at the
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127:. The ware takes its name from its
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35:it lacks sufficient corresponding
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318:, , Göteborg: Paul Åström, 1980.
280:Ancient Pottery of the Holy Land
102:Tell el-Yahudiyeh Ware juglets.
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125:Second Intermediate Period
363:Ancient Egyptian pottery
234:Well represented in the
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314:Kaplan, Maureen F. ,
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117:Tell el-Yahudiya ware
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181:Fabric and technique
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104:Rockefeller Museum
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200:geometric designs
133:Tell el-Yahudiyeh
121:Middle Bronze Age
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169:invaders.
48:introducing
357:Categories
263:References
244:Phoenician
210:Morphology
193:Decoration
137:Nile Delta
31:references
160:Canaanite
145:Levantine
129:type site
278:(1970),
250:See also
238:up into
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175:Jericho
149:Cypriot
44:improve
167:Hyksos
107:Israel
88:Byblos
33:, but
240:Nubia
204:chalk
220:duck
187:clay
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