КЕРАМИКА РАННЕГО ПЕРИОДА КУЛЬТУРЫ ДЗЕМОН (ПО МАТЕРИАЛАМ ПАМЯТНИКА ООКУБО)
Table of contents
Share
QR
Metrics
КЕРАМИКА РАННЕГО ПЕРИОДА КУЛЬТУРЫ ДЗЕМОН (ПО МАТЕРИАЛАМ ПАМЯТНИКА ООКУБО)
Annotation
PII
S0869-60630000408-1-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Edition
Pages
5-15
Abstract
The paper considers the archaeological materials from Ookubo (northern Honshu island, Japanese archipelago). The site has materials from the Early and Middle periods of the Jomon culture. The paper focuses on the Early Jomon pottery collection, which comprises a series of 50 vessels. The vessels are attributed to Lower Ento ceramic style which is encountered in Tohoku (northern Honshu) and southern Hokkaido. Their technological, morphological and decorative features share some common traits with some other Jomon ceramic styles and at the same time show certain specifi cs of Lower Ento style.
Keywords
Date of publication
01.01.2012
Number of purchasers
1
Views
628
Readers community rating
0.0 (0 votes)
Cite Download pdf

References



Additional sources and materials

Bobrinskij A.A. Goncharstvo Vostochnoj Evropy. Istochniki i metodika izucheniya. M., 1978.
Zhuschikhovskaya I.S. Simvolika verevki v yaponskoj kul'ture: k istokam traditsii // Dekorativno-prikladnoe iskusstvo Vostochnoj Azii: simvolika i kul'turnye traditsii. Vladivostok, 2009.
Klejn L.S. Arkheologicheskaya tipologiya. L., 1991.
Aikens S.M. First in the World: The Jomon Pottery of Early Japan // The Emergence of Pottery: Technology and Innovation in Ancient Societies. Washington, D.C., 1995.
Ancient Japan / Ed. R. Pearson. Washington, D.C., 1992.
Archaeological Research on the Odai Yamamoto I Site / Eds Odai Yamamoto I Site Excavation Team. Tokyo, 1999.
Armit I., Finlayson B. Social Strategies and Economic Change: Pottery in Context // The Emergence of Pottery: Technology and Innovation in Ancient Societies. Washington, D.S., 1995.
Habu J., Hall M. Jomon Pottery Production in Central Japan // Asian Perspectives. 1999. V. 38. № 1.
Jomon Jidai Sosoki: The Incipient Jomon. Yokohama, 1996.
Kaner S. Long-Term Innovation: The Appearance and Spread of Pottery in the Japanese Archipelago // Ceramics before Farming. L., 2009.
Kobayashi T. Jomon Reflections. Oxford, 2004.
Nishida Y. Fiber-tempered Pottery from the Makinouchi Site // Isaeki chosa kai hokoku: Reports of the Archaeological Center. V. 5. Nota, 1987.
Primitive Arts of Japan. V. 1. Jomon Pottery / Ed. S. Yamanouchi. Tokyo, 1964.
The Ochiai Keisaku Collection of Archaeological Objects // Illustrated Catalogue of National Museum of Japanese History. V. 1. Sakura, 2001.
Vandiver P.B. The Most Ancient Tradition of the Japanese Ceramics // Proceedings of the Intern. Symposium of Fine Ceramics, held in Arita, Saga prefecture, November 1991. Arita, 1991.
Whitbread I. The Characterization of Argillaceous Inclusions in Ceramic Thin Sections // Archaeometry. 1986. V. 28. № 1.
Zhushchikhovskaya I. Jomon pottery: cord-imitating decoration // Documenta Praehistorica. V. XXXIV. Ljubljana, 2007.
Zhushchikhovskaya I. Experimental Approach in Archaeological Ceramics Study (Russian Far East as a case of Study) // The Proceedings of Intern. Symposium on Ancient Ceramics’09. Shanghai; Beijing, 2009.

Comments

No posts found

Write a review
Translate