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  2. Keezhadi excavation site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keezhadi_excavation_site

    Keezhadi, or Keeladi, is a Sangam period settlement site, where excavation are carried out by the Archaeological Survey of India and the Tamil Nadu State Department of Archaeology.

  3. Ancient Egyptian pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Egyptian_pottery

    Ancient Egyptian pottery includes all objects of fired clay from ancient Egypt. [1] First and foremost, ceramics served as household wares for the storage, preparation, transport, and consumption of food, drink, and raw materials.

  4. Ceramic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic

    The word ceramic comes from the Ancient Greek word κεραμικός (keramikós), meaning "of or for pottery" [4] (from κέραμος (kéramos) 'potter's clay, tile, pottery'). [5] The earliest known mention of the root ceram-is the Mycenaean Greek ke-ra-me-we, workers of ceramic, written in Linear B syllabic script. [6]

  5. Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technology

    A stone pottery wheel found in the city-state of Ur dates to around 3,429 BCE, [47] and even older fragments of wheel-thrown pottery have been found in the same area. [47] Fast (rotary) potters' wheels enabled early mass production of pottery, but it was the use of the wheel as a transformer of energy (through water wheels , windmills, and even ...

  6. Kumhar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kumhar

    The piece which he had kept near his clay lump struck root and soon grew into a sugarcane plant. A few days later, when Brahma asked his sons for sugarcane, none of them could give it to him, excepting the Kumhara who offered a full plant. Brahma was pleased by the devotion of the potter to his work and awarded him the title Prajapati. [1]

  7. Pottery of ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottery_of_ancient_Greece

    They are by far most frequently found on Attic pottery. Signature (written retrograde) SOΦΙLOS MEΓΡΑΦSEN ("Sophilos megraphsen" – Sophilos drew me), c. 570 BC, British Museum, GR 1971.11–1.1. A number of sub-classes of inscription can be distinguished.

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