Item Details

Sphero-conical Vessels from the Ayyubid Wall in Cairo: A Typology (11th–15th c.)

Issue: Vol 3 No. 2 (2016) The Sphero-conical vessel: Name, object and usage

Journal: Journal of Islamic Archaeology

Subject Areas:

DOI: 10.1558/jia.v3i2.32827

Abstract:

During the archaeological excavations along the medieval walls of Cairo, undertaken by the Aga Khan Cultural Services and the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology in Cairo, a large amount of pottery has been discovered that can be dated from the Fatimid Period until the modern times. Within the Ayyubid and Mamluk layers a number of sphero-conical vessels have been identified. Made from a hard dense clay, these vessels are cooked to a high temperature and are coated with a purplish slip that sometimes appears shiny. The stratigraphy of the site has unfortunately not provided any clue concerning the function of these artefacts; however, very useful information with regard to dating can be understood. These containers can be divided into two different chronological groupings: Firstly, the Ayyubid era, which can be divided in two sub-groups; and secondly, the Mamluk era, represented by vessels exhibiting incised “scales” as decoration and in rare cases, a glazed surface. A number of similar containers from the Fatimid era can be added to the chronological-typology in order to show a kind of “prototype” to these spheroconical vessels. These vessels seem to be made of the same type of clay and are coated with the same slip.

Author: Julie Monchamp

View Original Web Page

References :

ʿAbd al-Raʾūf, ʿA. Y.


1978. Dirāsa fī al-Fuār al-Miṣrī: Qawārīr al-Nafṭ.” Islamic Archaeological Studies 1: 1–111.


Abūāliḥ al-Armanī


1895. The Churches and Monasteries of Egypt and Some Neighbouring Countries. Translated and edited by B.T.A. Evetts, notes by A.J. Butler. Oxford: Clarendon Press.


Adhal, K.


1997. “Seven sphero-conical vessels in the Stockholm Museum.” Medelhavsmuseet Bulletin 30: 58–69.


1996. À l’ombre d’Avicenne, la Médecine au temps des Califes. Exhibition from 18 November 1996 to 2 March 1997. Paris: Institut du Monde Arabe.


Arnon, Y. D.


2007. “Pottery, oil lamps and carved stone vessels.” In Excavation in Marcus Street, Ramla, 38–99. Haifa: Contract Archaeology Reports II.


Avissar, M.


2014. “ The ceramic finds from the Late Roman to the Ottoman periods at Bet Sheʾan (Youth Hostel).” ʿAtiqot 77: 65–146.


Bagatti, P. B.


1953. “Bombe a ‘fuoco greco’ in Palestina (VIII-XIII secolo).” Faenza, Bollettino del Museo Internazionale Delle Ceramiche in Faenza 39: 35–38.


Bahgat, A. and F. Massoul.


1930. La céramique musulmane de l’Égypte. Cairo: Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale.


Bilkadi, Z.


1995. “The oil weapons.” Saudi Aramco World 46(1): 22–27.


Bonnéric, J. and Schmitt, A.


2011. . “La céramique de la période fatimide à Tinnîs: Premier état de la question.” Cahier de la Céramique Égyptienne 9: 95–139.


Brosh, N.


1980. “A re-examination of Islamic ceramic grenades.” ʿAtiqot 14, 114–115. Jerusalem: Department of Antiquities and Museums.


Christides, V.


1993 . “Nafṭ.” Encyclopédie de l’Islam VII: 885–887. Leiden: Brill.


1994. De Bagdad à Ispahan. Manuscrits islamiques de la Filiale de Saint-Pétersbourg de l’Institut d’Etudes orientales, Académie des Sciences de Russie. Exhibition at Musée du Petit Palais, 14 October 1994 – 8 January 1995. Paris: Paris – Musées.


De Saulcy, M. F.


1874. “Note sur des projectiles à main, creux et en terre cuite, de fabrication arabe.” Mémoires de la Société Nationale des Antiquaires de France 35: 18–34.


Dumarçais, J.


1965. “Eolipiles.” Syria 42: 75–-79.


Ettinghausen, R.


1965. The uses of sphero-conical vessels in the Muslim east. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 24(3): 218–229. https://doi.org/10.1086/371816


Forest, Ch. and J. D. Forest.


1982. “Les fouilles de la municipalité de Beyrouth (1977). Syria 59: 1–76.


François, V.


1999. Céramiques médiévales à Alexandrie. Contribution à l’histoire économique de la ville. Etudes Alexandrines 2. Cairo: Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale.


Gayraud, R.-P., J.-Ch. Tréglia and L. Vallauri.


2009. “Assemblages de céramiques égyptiennes et témoins de production, datés par les fouilles d’Isṭabl Antar, Fustat (ixe-xe siècles).” In Actes du VIIIe congrès de l’AIECM2, Ciudad Real-Almagro, 27 février-3 mars 2006, edited by J. Zozaja, M. Retuerce, M.A. Hervás and A. de Juan, 171–192. Ciudad Real: Asociación Española de Arqueologìa Medieval.


Gouchani, A. and C. Adle.


1992. “A sphero-conical vessel as fuqqa’a, or a gourd for ‘beer’.” Muqarnas 9: 72–92. https://doi.org/10.2307/1523137


Hassan, A. Y. and Hill, D. R.


1986. Islamic Technology: An Illustrated History. Paris: Unescco.


Hildburgh, F.S.A.


1951. “Aeolipiles as fire-blowers.” Archaeologia 44: 27–55. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0261340900007207


Imbert, F.


2008. “Une nouvelle inscription de Saladin sur la muraille ayyûbide du Caire,” Annales Islamologiques 42: 409-421.


Kawatoko, M.


1992. Excavations of al-Fustat 1978-1985, vol. 2, edited by K. Sakurai. Tokyo: University of Waseda  (in japanese).


Lane, A.


1947. Early Islamic Pottery, London: Faber and Faber.


Luschley-Schmeisser, I.


1998. “Ein Tropf-gefäss mit gesichtertem inhalt,” Res Orientales XI, Parfums d’Orient: 151-158.


Masson, A., M. Naguib and M. Shafey.


2012. “Overview of the ceramic productions from Luxor town mound.” Bulletin de liaison de la Céramique Égyptienne 23: 125–145.


Mercier, M.


1952. Le feu Grégeois, les feux de guerres depuis l’Antiquité, la poudre à canon. Paris: Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner.


Milwright, M.


2008. The Fortress of the Raven, Karak in the Middle Islamic Period (1100–1650). Islamic History and Civilization 72. Leiden: Brill. https://doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004165199.I-445


Mouton, J.-M.


2010. Ṣadr, une forteresse de Saladin au Sinaï: Histoire et archéologie. Mémoires de l’Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres 43(1-2). Paris: De Boccard Edition.


Partington, J. R.


1960. A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder. Cambridge: Heffer and Sons.


Pentz, P.


1988. “A medieval workshop of producing Greek fire grenade.” Antiquity 62(234): 89–93. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00073531


Pradines, S. and D. Laville, M. Matkowski, J. Monchamp, N. O’Hora, M. Suleyman and T. Zurrud.


2009. “Excavations of the archeological triangle: 10 years of archaeological excavations in Fatimid Cairo (2000 to 2009).” Mishkah 4: 177–219.


Prag, K.


2006. “Defensive ditches in Ottoman fortifications in Bilād al-Šam.” In Muslim Military Architecture in Greater Syria: From the Coming of Islam to the Ottoman period, edited by H. Kennedy, 295–306. Leiden: Brill.


Riis P. J. and V. Poulsen.


1957. Hama IV, 2: Fouilles et recherches de la Fondation Carlsberg 1931–1938 : Les verreries et poteries médiévales. Copenhagen: Fondation Carlsberg.


Rogers, J. M.


1969. “Aeolipiles again.” In Forschungen zur Kunst Asiens in Memoriam Kurt Erdmann, edited by Kurt Erdmann, Oktay Aslanapa and Rudolf Naumann, 147–158. Istanbul: Istanbul Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi, Türk ve Islâm Sanati Kürsüsü.



Ruszczyc, B.


1962. “Des bombes mameluks.” Bulletin du Musée national de Varsovie 3(3): 87–88.


Salamé-Sarkis, H.


1980. Contribution à l’histoire de Tripoli et de sa région à l’époque des croisades, problèmes d’histoire, d’architecture et de céramique. Paris: Institut français d’archéologie du Proche-Orient.


Sauvaget, J.


1949. “Flacons à vin ou grenades à ‘feu grégeois’.” Annuaire de l’Institut de Philologie et d’Histoire Orientales et Slaves 9: 525–530.


Savage-Smith, E.


1997. “Sphero-conical vessels: A typology of forms and functions.” In Science, Tools and Magic, Part Two: Mundane Worlds, Volume XII Part 2, edited by E. Savage-Smith, 324–333. Oxford: The Nasser D. Khalily Collection of Islamic Art.


Seyrig, H.


1959. “Flacons ? grenades ? éolipiles?” Syria 36: 81–89.


Sezgin, F.


2002. Technology of Warfare, Texts and studies V. Natural sciences in Islam vol. 80. Frankfurt: Institute for the History of Arabic-Islamic Science.


Sharvit, J.


2008. “The sphero-conical vessels.” In Paneas II: Small Finds and Other Studies, edited by V. Tzaferis, and S. Israeli, 101–112. Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority.


Stern, E. J.


2012. ʿAkko I: The 1991–1998 Excavations. The Crusader-period Pottery. Israel Antiquities Authority Reports 51(1–2). Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority.


Tzaferis, V. and S. Israeli.


2008. Paneas I: The Roman to Early Islamic Periods Excavations in Areas A, B, E, F, G and H. Israel Antiquities Authority Reports 37. Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority.


Watson, O.


2004. Ceramics from Islamic Lands. Al-Sabah Collection, Kuwait National Museum. London: Thames & Hudson.


Whitcomb, D. S. and J. Johnson.


1979. Quseir al-Qadim 1978. Malibu, CA: American Research Center in Egypt Report.


1982. Quseir al-Qadim 1980. Malibu, CA: American Research Center in Egypt Report.