Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-sjtt6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-27T16:48:43.707Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The introduction of the glaze in al-Andalus: Technological waves and Oriental influences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2020

Elena Salinas
Affiliation:
Characterisation of Materials Group (GCM), Physics Department, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC-BarcelonaTech), Av. Eduard Maristany 16, Barcelona08019, Spain
Trinitat Pradell
Affiliation:
Characterisation of Materials Group (GCM), Physics Department, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC-BarcelonaTech), Av. Eduard Maristany 16, Barcelona08019, Spain

Abstract

This research develops a much-needed approach to the study of glazed ware production in al-Andalus (Muslim Spain and Portugal) during the early Middle Ages. The introduction of glaze to the Iberian Peninsula was a long and complex process involving three waves of technology transfer arriving from the eastern Islamic regions between the ninth and eleventh centuries. In this paper, the main glaze workshops of each technological wave have been characterised in order to understand how the medieval technological transmission took place and how political and economic factors influenced this gradual dissemination.

إدخال التزجيج إلى الأندلس: الموجات التكنولوجية والتأثيرات الشرقيةإيلينا ساليناس، ترينيتات براديل

يطور هذا البحث نهجاً مطلوباً بشدة لدراسة إنتاج الأواني المزججة (glazed ware) في الأندلس (إسبانيا المسلمة والبرتغال) خلال العصور الوسطى المبكرة. لقد كان إدخال التزجيج إلى شبه الجزيرة الإيبيرية عملية طويلة ، حيث تضمنت ثلاث موجات من نقل التكنولوجيا القادمة من المناطق الإسلامية الشرقية بين القرنين التاسع والحادي عشر. في هذه الورقة، تم وصف و تمييز ورش التزجيج الرئيسية لكل موجة تكنولوجية من أجل فهم كيفية حدوث الانتقال التكنولوجي في العصور الوسطى وكيف أثرت العوامل السياسية والاقتصادية على هذا الانتشار التدريجي.

Type
Part 2: Special Reports: Islamic pottery
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for Libyan Studies 2020

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.)

Footnotes

The original version of this article was published with the incorrect abstract. A notice detailing this has been published and the error rectified in the online PDF and HTML copies.

References

Ben Amara, A., SchvoereR, M., Daoulatli, A. and Rammah, M. 2001. ‘Jaune de Raqqada’ et autres couleurs de céramiques glaçurées aghlabides de Tunisie (IX - X siècles). Revue d'Archéométrie 25(1): 179186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carvajal, J.C. 2013. Islamicization or Islamicizations? Expansion of Islam and social practice in the Vega of Granada (south-east Spain). World Archaeology 45(1): 109123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Castillo, F. and Martínez, R. 1993. Producciones cerámicas en Bayyana, I Encuentro de Arqueología y Patrimonio, La cerámica altomedieval en el sur de al-Andalus. Salobreña, 1990. Granada: 67116.Google Scholar
Escudero, J. 1991. La cerámica decorada en “verde y manganeso” de Madinat al-Zahra. Cuadernos de Madīnat al-Zahrā 2: 127161.Google Scholar
Gómez, S. et al. (in press). El uso del vidriado en el Garb al-Andalus y su lenta difusión, Vidriados medievales en España. Investigaciones recientes.Google Scholar
Heidenreich, A. 2007. La loza dorada medieval en la Península Ibérica. Aportaciones recientes a su evolución y nuevos datos para su cronología. Anales de Arqueología Cordobesa 18: 401424.Google Scholar
Íñiguez, MªC and Mayorga, J.F. 1993. Un alfar emiral en Málaga, I Encuentro de Arqueología y Patrimonio. La cerámica altomedieval en el sur de al-Andalus. Granada: 117138.Google Scholar
Matin, M., Tite, M. and Watson, P. 2018. On the origins of tin-opacified ceramic glazes: New evidence from early Islamic Egypt, the Levant, Mesopotamia, Iran, and Central Asia. Journal of Archaeological Science 92: 4266.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molera, J., Carvajal, J.C., Molina, G. and Pradell, T. 2018. Glazes, colourants and decorations in early Islamic glazed ceramics from the Vega of Granada (9th to 12th centuries AD). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 21: 11411151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ortega, J.M., Gutiérrez, F.J., Pérez-Arantegui, J. and Déléry, C. 2013. La cerámica dorada en el noreste de la Península Ibérica: las taifas de Zaragoza y Albarracín. Proceedings of REMAI: 291324.Google Scholar
Peña, R., García, V. and Zarco, E. (in press). Crisoles para la elaboración de vidrio de época visigoda localizados en la Vega Baja de Toledo, Vidriados medievales en España. Investigaciones recientes.Google Scholar
Pradell, T., Molera Smith, A., Climent-Font, A. and Tite, M. 2008. Technology of Islamic lustre. Journal of Cultural Heritage 9: 123128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Priestman, S. 2016. The silk road or the sea? Journal of Islamic Archaeology 3(1): 136.Google Scholar
Rosselló, G. 1995. La céramique verte et brune en al-Andalus du Xe au XIIIe siècle, Le Vert et le Brun: de Kairouan à Avignon, céramiques du Xe au XVe siècle, Marseille: 104–117.Google Scholar
Salinas, E. and Pradell, T. 2018. The transition from lead transparent to tin-opacified productions in the western Islamic lands: al-Andalus, c. 875-929 CE. Journal of Archaeological Science 94: 111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salinas, E. and Zozaya, J. 2016. Pechina: el antecedente de las cerámicas vidriadas islámicas en al-Andalus, X Congresso Internacional Cerâmica Medieval no Mediterrâneo. Silves-Mértola: 573576.Google Scholar
Watson, O. 2004. Ceramics from Islamic Lands. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar