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.
Evidence for an Anatolian orientation includes pottery styles, architectural designs, and burial practices which was not standard in the Mycenaean world.
[104] However, Mycenaean pottery has been found at Troy VI, showing that it did trade with the Greeks and the Aegean.
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.
As yet, however, it is contemporary with LHIIIC (LBA) pottery on the mainland.
The return to a simpler pottery causes Korfmann to hypothesize a "humble folk" investment of the ruins.
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.
The palaces can be counted as vanished, as the last pottery at Pylos was LH IIIC.
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.
In the lower city was pottery from the early and middle Proto-geometric period, characteristic of the Dark Age.