Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-sh8wx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-21T16:55:09.011Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Old and New World Spanish Majolica Technology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2013

Get access

Extract

Majolica pottery is an earthenware covered with lead glaze opacified and whitened by adding a small percentage of tin oxide. The technology of majolica production, a Muslim contribution, was introduced into Spain and then diffused to the Western Hemisphere in the course of colonization very soon after the Spanish arrival in Mexico in 1521. (See Table I for Majolica production sources and excavation sites.)

In the 1980s there were two references on the organization of majolica production in both Spain and the New World. Descriptions of the layouts of the potters' workshops, of the sources of the clays, how the kilns were used, and how the glazes were made are taken from historical and ethnographic sources. These authors also discuss the interesting and important effect of the presence of Italian potters in both Seville and the New World. However, little has been written based on archaeologically excavated material from Seville, the main source of supply to the New World, or from known Puebia or Mexico City production.

In the 1970s a project involving neutron activation analysis of Spanish majolica ceramics was developed through the cooperative efforts of Malcolm Watkins and Richard Ahlborn of the National Museum of American History, Charles Fairbanks of the University of Florida, and Jacqueline Olin. Neutron activation analysis provides precise simultaneous determination of the concentrations of up to 35 elements. Two chemically distinct groups of ceramics were identified among sherds excavated at New World sites. They could be stylistically divided between Spanish and Mexican production with some important exceptions.

Type
Art and Technology
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1992

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1.Lister, F.C. and Lister, R.H., Sixteenth Century Majolica Pottery in the Valley of Mexico, (University of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona, 1982).Google Scholar
2.Lister, F.C. and Lister, R.H., Andalusian Ceramics in Spain and New Spain, (University of Arizona Press, Tucson, Arizona, 1987).Google Scholar
3.Myers, J.E., Amores, F., Olin, J.S., and Pleguezuelo, A., Historical Archaeology 26 (1) (1992) in press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4.Lorenzo, J., Vera, M., and Escudero, C., Anuario Arqueologico de Andalucia (Consejeria de Cultura de la Junta de Andalucia, 1987) p. 574580.Google Scholar
5. Lister, see Reference 2, p. 256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6. Albert Jornet “Provenance and Technological Investigations of Spanish and Spanish Colonial Majolica”, unpublished manuscript on file at the Conservation Analytical Laboratory.Google Scholar
7.Gonzalez-Vilchez, C., Garcia-Ramos, G., Gonzalez-Garcia, F., and Pellicer-Catalan, M., Proceedings of the 22nd Symposium on Archaeometry (University of Bradford, 1983) p. 388404.Google Scholar
8. Lister, see Reference 2, p. 160.Google Scholar
9.Kleinmann, B., Proceedings of the 24th In ternational Archaeometry Symposium, edited by Olin, J.S. and Blackman, M.J. (Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC, 1986) p. 73.Google Scholar
10.Jornet, A., Blackman, M.J., and Olin, J.S., Ceramics and Civilization: Ancient Technology to Modern Science, edited by Kingery, D., (American Ceramic Society, Columbus, Ohio, 1985) p. 235.Google Scholar
11.Jornet, A., Blackman, M.J., and Olin, J.S., Ceramics and Civilization: Ancient Technology to Modern Science, edited by Kingery, D., (American Ceramic Society, Columbus, Ohio, 1985) p. 253.Google Scholar
12.Goggin, J.M., Spanish Majolica in the New World: Types of the Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries (Yale University Press, New Haven, 1968).Google Scholar
13.Fortnum, C., Drury, E., Majolica, London, n.d.Google Scholar
14.Rosenthal, E., Pottery and Ceramics from Common Brick to Fine China, London (1949).Google Scholar
15.Binns, C.F., Potter's Craft (Van Nostrand, Princeton, 1967).Google Scholar
16.Perkins, W.W., Ceramic Glossary (American Ceramic Society, Columbus, Ohio, 1984) p. 38.Google Scholar
17.Cervantes, E.A., Loza blanca y azulejo de Puebla, 2 vols., Mexico City (1939).Google Scholar
18. Lister, see Reference 2, p. 265.Google Scholar
19.Olin, J.S., Harbottle, G., and Sayre, E.V., Archaeological Chemistry II, edited by Carter, G.F. (American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 1978) p. 200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
20.Myers, J.E., Amores, F., Olin, J.S., and Pleguezuelo, A., Historical Archaeology 26 (1) (1992) in press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21.Maggetti, M., Westley, H., and Olin, J.S., Archaeological Chemistry III, edited by Lambert, J.B. (American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 1984) p. 151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
22.Deagan, Kathleen, Artifacts of the Spanish Colonies of Florida and the Caribbean, 1500-1800 (Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC, 1987).Google Scholar
23.Olin, J.S. and Blackman, M.J., Archaeological Chemistry IV, edited by Allen, R.O. (American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 1989) p. 87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
24. Maggetti, see Reference 21, p. 169.Google Scholar
25.Joel, E.C., Olin, J.S., and Blackman, M.J., Proceedings of the 26th International Archaeometry Symposium (University of Toronto, 1988), p. 188.Google Scholar
26.Skowronek, R.K., Historical Archaeology 21 (2) (1987) p. 101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar