Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Archaeological Site of Troy' has mentioned 'Pottery' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
Goods discovered in these wrecks included copper and tin ingots, bronze tools and weapons, ebony, ivory, ostrich egg shells, jewelry, and pottery from across the Mediterranean. | WIKI |
Evidence for an Anatolian orientation includes pottery styles, architectural designs, and burial practices which was not standard in the Mycenaean world. | WIKI |
[104] However, Mycenaean pottery has been found at Troy VI, showing that it did trade with the Greeks and the Aegean. | WIKI |
Within the walls of this stratum (Troy VI), much Mycenaean pottery dating from Late Helladic (LH) periods III A and III B (c.xc2xa01400 xe2x80x93 c.xc2xa01200xc2xa0BC) was uncovered, suggesting a relation between the Trojans and Mycenaeans. | WIKI |
As yet, however, it is contemporary with LHIIIC (LBA) pottery on the mainland. | WIKI |
The return to a simpler pottery causes Korfmann to hypothesize a "humble folk" investment of the ruins. | WIKI |
This was replaced by Sub-Mycenaean pottery, a short-lived Mycenaean-like pottery with geometric motifs, considered transitional to Geometric pottery, the ware characteristic everywhere in the Greek world of the Dark Age. | WIKI |
The palaces can be counted as vanished, as the last pottery at Pylos was LH IIIC. | WIKI |
The latter part of Troy IIIb2 sees the replacement of their pottery with wares, such as "Knobbed Ware," characteristic of the Balkan-Black Sea region. | WIKI |
In the lower city was pottery from the early and middle Proto-geometric period, characteristic of the Dark Age. | WIKI |