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Slip-painted pottery bowl, with an archer on horseback

1200/1299

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

This is a striking image of an archer drawing his bow and arrow, atop a rearing horse. The pose has been manipulated so as to fit into the round space as neatly as possible. Any remaining background space has been filled with curling scrolls of stylized plant stems and leaves. The bowl is an example of two pottery techniques: sgraffito incised decoration and the contrasting splashware glazing. Both were popular means of decorating ceramics: they were widespread in Samanid Iran and cAbbasid Iraq in the ninth and tenth centuries, and also during the late Fatimid and Ayyubid periods (eleventh to thirteenth centuries) in Anatolia, Syria, Iraq and Egypt. Multicolour-painted sgraffito remained popular in Mamluk Egypt and Syria (1250-1516), where it began to feature inscriptions and heraldic devices rather than figurative subjects.

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  • Title: Slip-painted pottery bowl, with an archer on horseback
  • Date Created: 1200/1299
  • Physical Dimensions: Diameter: 26.30cm; Height: 11.70cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: slipped; glazed; incised
  • Subject: equestrian
  • Registration number: 1931,0716.1
  • Production place: Made in Syria, North
  • Place: Found/Acquired Aleppo
  • Period/culture: Mamluk dynasty
  • Material: pottery
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Tabbagh, Georges
British Museum

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