1998
DOI: 10.17561/aytm.v6i0.1527
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La cerámica a mano de Nakur (ss. IX-X) producción beréber medieval

Abstract: Los resultados aquí expuestos han sido obtenidos en el marco de un proyecto de cooperación arqueológica franco-marroquí, Casa de Velázquez-INSAP 1, titulado Génesis de la ciudad islámica en Marruecos (Nakur Agmat, Tamdult) cuyo objetivo es aportar precisiones sobre el proceso de desarrollo urbano que conoce el Magreb occidental en los ss. VIII-IX (con algunas prolongaciones hasta el s. X). La aproximación a este fenómeno se hace a través de tres asentamientos medievales, mencionados tempranamente como ciudades… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…It seems rather to be an element that was introduced later, influenced by other groups in the tenth century or later. This theory is also suggested in the case of Nakūr (Acién Almansa et al 1999, 47–58), where the comparison of Medieval types (tenth and eleventh centuries) with the traditional Berber ceramics, which are well defined in this area thanks to ethnographic observations, show clearly the non-existent connection among both (Cressier 2018, 510).…”
Section: The Berber Problem and Research In The Maghrebmentioning
confidence: 78%
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“…It seems rather to be an element that was introduced later, influenced by other groups in the tenth century or later. This theory is also suggested in the case of Nakūr (Acién Almansa et al 1999, 47–58), where the comparison of Medieval types (tenth and eleventh centuries) with the traditional Berber ceramics, which are well defined in this area thanks to ethnographic observations, show clearly the non-existent connection among both (Cressier 2018, 510).…”
Section: The Berber Problem and Research In The Maghrebmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…16This type of decoration does not exist in Volubilis, or in the ceramic repertoires of the eighth century of the ‘maison au compas’ (Atki 2011), or in the contexts from the eighth and ninth centuries in the area of the Idrissides Bath, or in the houses next to the Byzantine wall (Amorós Ruiz and Fili 2011, 2018). In Nakur, painted ceramics are almost non-existent (Acién Almansa et al 1999, 50; 2003, 626 and 631), as happens in Rirha (Coll Conesa et al 2012, 262); there are also none apparent in Melilla (Salado Escaño et al 2011), or in the oldest levels of Sijilmasa (Messier and Fili 2011). However, painted ceramics are documented for al-Basra, a city built in the ninth century, where they appear in 11% of the clear productions (buff-firing wares) for all the sequences of the site (Benco 2011, 53), but are scarce in the older period (Benco 1987, 131) and are usually wide-mouthed jugs (Benco 1987, 67).…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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