Pottery Production Changes During the Transition from Byzantine to Umayyad Rule

Authors

  • Ahmed Al-Shorman Yarmouk University
  • Atef Shiyab Yarmouk University
  • Maher Tarboush Yarmouk University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jia.31567

Keywords:

political-religious changes, Byzantine and Umayyad pottery, Gadara, archaeometry

Abstract

Pottery is the most affected tool by the changes in human societies; this is due to its flexibility during forming. In order to estimate the effect of the transition of inhabitants of the urban center of Umm Qais (Gadara), north Jordan, from Byzantine (Christianity) to Umayyad (Islam) rule on pottery production traditions, a total of 29 cooking pots and sherds of pottery jars were selected. The samples were dated according to stratigraphy, archaeological context, and parallel examples to the proposed periods. The samples were investigated following the typological and archaeometric approaches. The raw materials and firing technology of the pottery during the two periods were determined following chemical and mineralogical methods using petrography, XRD,  ED-XRF, and EDX-SEM techniques. The results revealed that many styles and forms of pottery continued to be produced and some new styles emerged at the urban center of Gadara.  Technically, the potters inherited the knowledge of selecting the available raw materials and firing conditions of pottery during the Byzantine and Umayyad periods. During these periods, Umm Qais potters used the local raw materials—non-calcareous ferruginous illite clays mixed with medium to high amounts of coarse quartz grains and fired at temperatures around 1000° in an oxidizing atmosphere to produce cooking pots. They used the available medium to highcalcareous ferruginous illite clays and fired them at temperatures between 850° and 950° in an oxidizing atmosphere to produce the jars. Importing fine fabric jars and cooking pots during the seventh century from Jarash are indicated too. Thus, the types and forms of everyday use pottery were more affected by the political and religious changes than the technical aspects.

Author Biographies

  • Ahmed Al-Shorman, Yarmouk University

    Ahmed Al-Shorman is an Associate professor in Applied sciences in archaeology (archaeometry), at Yarmouk University in Jordan. He received his PhD. in archaeometry from Ruhr-University Bochum, and the German mining museum, Germany, 2009 with an archaeometric study on finds from Faynan, Jordan and other sites. His primary area of research is in archaeological materials analysis with a major interest in ceramics, including ancient refractory ceramics (furnaces, casting moulds, crucibles, and tuyeres, and their raw materials) as well as pottery kilns, brick and tiles. His background in geology is reflected in his analysis of raw materials and manufacturing technology, as well as the provenance of pottery the archaeometric investigation of other inorganic archaeological materials  such as glass, stone (rock), metal, plaster, and mortar.

  • Atef Shiyab, Yarmouk University

    Atef Shiyab currently works as Dean of Faculty of Tourism and Hotel Management at Yarmouk University in Jordan where he is a faculty member of Department of Archaeology and Epigraphy. His research is in Tourism, Archaeology, Anthropology as well as Museums and Conservation Science. His specific focus in archaeology is in analytical chemistry.

  • Maher Tarboush, Yarmouk University

    Maher Tarboush Acting Associate Dean for Quality Control and a member of the faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology at Yarmouk University in Jordan. He received his PhD from the University of Copenhagen (2015). 

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Published

2024-10-10

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How to Cite

Al-Shorman, A., Shiyab, A., & Tarboush, M. (2024). Pottery Production Changes During the Transition from Byzantine to Umayyad Rule. Journal of Islamic Archaeology, 11(1), 9-33. https://doi.org/10.1558/jia.31567