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Article Issue 113.1

The Production and Distribution of Pottery at Pompeii: A Review of the Evidence; Part 1, Production

J. Theodore Peña and Myles McCallum

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Secondary Image
Potter throwing at a single-wheel type potter’s wheel set up on a flat roof.
This study, in two parts, reviews the evidence from Pompeii for the production and distribution of pottery. Part 1, the present article, considers the production of pottery. Evidence is scant for the pre-Roman period but includes a refuse deposit containing Black Gloss Ware wasters, a pottery kiln with associated Black Gloss Ware and commonware wasters, and a mold for the manufacture of Italo-Megarian Ware bowls. There is substantially more material for the Roman period, including two frescoes depicting potters, three graffiti referring to potters, and the excavated remains of two modestly sized pottery production facilities, neither of which has been published in detail. The frescoes suggest that potters at Pompeii used rod-driven, single-wheel potter’s wheels. The Via di Nocera facility, which manufactured lamps and commonware, is perhaps the most complete pottery production facility from the Roman world, and it is possible to reconstruct the operations carried out in its various spaces in considerable detail. The Via Superior facility, which manufactured cookwares, was only partially excavated, so it is more difficult to infer its operations. Together, these two facilities may have supplied Roman-period Pompeii with much or all of its locally manufactured cookwares, commonwares, and lamps. Part 2, which will appear in a forthcoming issue of the AJA, examines the material basis for pottery production at Pompeii (i.e., the availability and use of raw materials) and its distribution.

Author bios

Volume 113 No. 1   
January 2009   
Table of Contents

Articles

A Letter from the Editor-in-Chief
Naomi J. Norman

Primitive Life and the Construction of the Sympotic Past in Athenian Vase Painting
Kathryn Topper

Prolegomenon to the Study of Apulian Red-Figure Pottery
T.H. Carpenter

From Clay to Stone: Monumentality and Traditionalism in Volterran Urns
Roman Roth

Astral Path to Soul Salvation in Late Antiquity? The Orientation of Two Late Roman Imperial Mausolea from Eastern Serbia
Dragana Mladenović

Forum Note

The Study of Hands on Greek Inscriptions: The Need for a Digital Approach
Stephen V. Tracy and Constantin Papaodysseus

Field Report

Tracing Late Roman Rural Occupation in Adriatic Central Italy
Hélène Verreyke and Frank Vermeulen

Museum Review

Hadrian in London
Mary T. Boatwright

Review Article

The Greek Expansion to the Black Sea
Jacques Morin

Book Reviews

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Books Received

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