Thursday, May 14, 2020

Ceramic food bowl by Pamela Cummings

Carinated pots and bowls with wide, steep flared rims became common in West Asia in the Iron Age.  Moorey in his Deve Hüyük catalogue attributes the style's origin to the Neo-Assyrian empire.  They were made of pottery, metal, glass and even stone.  While not uniquely Achaemenid, they serve as a good example of a kind of foodware that is often found at Achaemenid sites, and thus will prove useful both as an educational display and, of course, any time you need to eat at an event that's open to the public.  Their international status should also make them more versatile for portrayals of people from elsewhere in West Asia in our time period.

I commissioned this bowl from Pamela Cummings, the Harrisburg, PA-based artisan who also made my water bottle last year.  It's primarily meant as a personal bowl for barley, stew, porridge (I've recently become a big fan of pease porridge) and other spoon foods, but it could also serve as a small common bowl for nuts or dates.  We designed it to be about the size of a cereal bowl, about 4-1/2 inches (11.4cm) across at the narrow carinated point, 6 inches (15.2cm) across at the rim, and 3 inches (7.6cm) deep on the outside.  It's based on a number of finds, both metal and ceramic, from Persepolis and Deve Hüyük.

In construction, it closely matches the water bottle.  Its walls are of medium thickness - thicker than china but thinner than, for instance, the heavier styles of American stoneware.  Also like the bottle, it's made of a faintly speckled, greyish-brown clay with a matte glaze to resemble unglazed, burnished pottery, yet meet modern food safety standards.  (If your local potter works in different types of clay, buff and terra cotta would also be acceptable colors.)  The compact, deep shape and the rim make it convenient to hold, but it has enough of a flat base to sit on a table.

Also as before, I enjoyed working with Pamela on this project, and highly recommend her work.  Her prices are also very reasonable for such important camp items.

2 comments:

  1. Hi, I was notified of your site by the potter herself! I would love to hear about your anniversary itinerary - starting in Marathon and onwards I presume. I lived in Greece for 25 years and am a grecophile in everything including its ancient history. Would love to hear more!

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    1. Hello! Well, in the sense of travel, there wasn't any, really - both Marathon 2011 and 2015 took place entirely within a temporary camp on Schinias Beach, apart from the march from the monument down to the beach one morning in 2011.

      In the sense of scheduling, my memory is a bit fuzzy. As best I recall, Marathon 2011 lasted three days, and we had battle reenactments in the early afternoon of the second and third. On the second day we did the march preceding the battle at about midday. We also spent a lot of time just talking to the public. On the evening of the last day, all the reenactors had dinner at Archeon Gefsis.

      Marathon 2015 was a bit more structured IIRC. It lasted five days, and we were all assigned to various stations where we would demonstrate things to the public all day. I was at the archery range. There were also two battle reenactments on, I believe, the third and fourth days, but no procession that time. The last day was also something of a wash because the ferry operators were about to go on strike, so a lot of the reenactors had to leave early, the camp was much smaller and there wasn't as much going on.

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