Difference between revisions of "Pottery"

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*''Japanese'': 陶器 ''(touki)'', 焼物 ''(yakimono)''
 
*''Japanese'': 陶器 ''(touki)'', 焼物 ''(yakimono)''
  
[[Kyushu]] yields the oldest pottery in the world - dated at approximately 10-11,000 BCE. As one moves from West to East along the archipelago, the disparity of dates of the pottery and our own time becomes less and less<ref>Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan, Page 57</ref>.
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[[Kyushu]] yields some of the oldest pottery in the world - dated at approximately 10-11,000 BCE. As one moves from West to East along the archipelago, the disparity of dates of the pottery and our own time becomes less and less<ref>Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan, Page 57</ref>.
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While debates go back and forth between whether pottery developed first in China or in Japan, as different sites are discovered, and dated or re-dated, it is widely accepted that pottery in Japan does go back at least as far as several millennia BCE, defining the [[Jomon period|Jômon period]] of Japanese prehistory. The term Jômon, meaning "cord marked," in fact comes from a description of the pottery decoration style of typical works of that period. Jômon pieces were worked entirely by hand, however, without the use of a potter's wheel, a technology that developed or was introduced in the [[Yayoi period]].<ref>Kobayashi Tatsuo, Simon Kaner, and Oki Nakamura, ''Jomon Reflections: Forager Life and Culture in the Prehistoric Japanese Archipelago'', Oxford: Oxbow Books (2004), 77.</ref>
  
 
[[Seto wares]] were the dominant form in the late medieval period, up until the late 16th century, when [[Mino wares]] gained in commercial strength. [[Oda Nobunaga]] took steps to protect Seto potters by requiring Seto wares to be made in [[Seto (Owari)|Seto]] - in other words, potters elsewhere in the archipelago were forbidden from copying Seto potters' techniques.<ref>Gallery labels, ''Jidai wo tsukutta waza'' 時代を作った技 exhibition, National Museum of Japanese History, July 2013.</ref>
 
[[Seto wares]] were the dominant form in the late medieval period, up until the late 16th century, when [[Mino wares]] gained in commercial strength. [[Oda Nobunaga]] took steps to protect Seto potters by requiring Seto wares to be made in [[Seto (Owari)|Seto]] - in other words, potters elsewhere in the archipelago were forbidden from copying Seto potters' techniques.<ref>Gallery labels, ''Jidai wo tsukutta waza'' 時代を作った技 exhibition, National Museum of Japanese History, July 2013.</ref>

Revision as of 20:41, 5 October 2014

  • Japanese: 陶器 (touki), 焼物 (yakimono)

Kyushu yields some of the oldest pottery in the world - dated at approximately 10-11,000 BCE. As one moves from West to East along the archipelago, the disparity of dates of the pottery and our own time becomes less and less[1].

While debates go back and forth between whether pottery developed first in China or in Japan, as different sites are discovered, and dated or re-dated, it is widely accepted that pottery in Japan does go back at least as far as several millennia BCE, defining the Jômon period of Japanese prehistory. The term Jômon, meaning "cord marked," in fact comes from a description of the pottery decoration style of typical works of that period. Jômon pieces were worked entirely by hand, however, without the use of a potter's wheel, a technology that developed or was introduced in the Yayoi period.[2]

Seto wares were the dominant form in the late medieval period, up until the late 16th century, when Mino wares gained in commercial strength. Oda Nobunaga took steps to protect Seto potters by requiring Seto wares to be made in Seto - in other words, potters elsewhere in the archipelago were forbidden from copying Seto potters' techniques.[3]

Notes

  1. Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan, Page 57
  2. Kobayashi Tatsuo, Simon Kaner, and Oki Nakamura, Jomon Reflections: Forager Life and Culture in the Prehistoric Japanese Archipelago, Oxford: Oxbow Books (2004), 77.
  3. Gallery labels, Jidai wo tsukutta waza 時代を作った技 exhibition, National Museum of Japanese History, July 2013.

Sources

Delmer M. Brown (editor). The Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan