Black Top Vase with mark (water)

- very rare -

Ancient Egypt, Predynastic Period, Naqada I - II, 4000 - 3500 BC

MATERIAL: Pottery

DIMENSIONS: 19 cm Height.

PROVENANCE:
Private collection of Mr. Kobayashi, France, acquired on a trip to Egypt in the 1970s.

CONDITION: In good condition in general. Intact.

DESCRIPTION:

A pottery vessel belonging to the type known as “black-topped” as the upper area of the jar is black in colour. This example is quite a large jar for Predynastic productions. The body is ovoid, with a stable, but very small base to allow it to stand upright. The rim is slightly everted. It presents the mark of what could be the hieroglyph representing "water", and possibly a half figure of a fish can be seen underneath.

The red colour of the black-topped jars was achieved through the use of engobe. The exterior surface was covered with liquid clay mixed with water and red ochre (from earth with ferrous minerals) after the first drying and before the firing. The black was obtained when, after the firing, the vessel was placed head down in the embers. The carbonization of the part submerged produced the black colour.

More than 5000 years ago, around 3150 BC, Narmer, the king of Upper Egypt, conquered the area of the Nile Delta and united the fertile valley of the river into one kingdom, founding in this manner what would be one of the most splendid empire in antiquity, and becoming himself its first pharaoh. With this act, the Dynastic Period of Egyptian history began, which would last for more than 3000 years until the conquest of Egypt by Octavio and its assimilation as a Roman province.

But before the arrival of Narmer, and over a period of almost a millennium, the social, cultural and religious foundations of the future splendour of Egyptian civilization had already been laid in what is known as the Predynastic Period. This corresponds to the Chalcolithic, the Age of Copper, and must be considered to be divided into three stages. In Upper Egypt, the village of El-Badari became the nucleus of the groups known as the Badari culture (4400-3800 BC). The Amratian culture or Naqada I (4000–3500 BC) developed in parallel and then replaced the former. This was followed by the Gerzean or Naqada II (3500-3200 BC) and the Protodynastic or Naqada III (3200-3000 BC). Both the names Amratia and Gerzeh derive from sites where the oldest vestiges from these phases were found: El-Amrah, in Upper Egypt and el-Gerzeh, in Middle Egypt. The name Naqada, was given to these periods by Werner Kaiser, and was from the name of the city of Naqada, situated on the Banks of the Nile, 25 km north of Luxor.

This chronological division, in periods and cultures, derives from the study of the cultural material found in different burials, found both by Flinders Petrie, and later, by Kaiser. These burials had similar characteristics: a hole dug in the desert in which the deceased was buried in a foetal position. The dryness of the desert ensured the mummification of the body, thus conserving it for eternity. Grave goods were placed around the body, and these were principally: pieces of jewellery, vases in both terracotta and stone, cosmetic palettes, and knives and other flint tools. Although this was a formative period, objects of considerable artistic quality were made, and it was the moment of splendour for pottery vases, as well as for stone vases in a multitude of forms and typologies. One of these burial sites can be seen today in the British Museum.

Thanks to the volume and varied typology of pottery vases, Petrie established a classification of the types found at Naqada and called this Sequence Dating (SD). The result was a table with 50 SD numbers from 30 onward, so as to be able to incorporate ancient cultures and knives that were not known. The Badarian was established between SD 21-29; Naqada I between 30-38; Naqada II between 36-60 and Naqada III between SD 61-80. Later, Kaiser refined Petrie’s system, which is still valid today.

During the Naqada I Period tombs were individual or multiple, in the case of tombs of a woman and a child. The deceased were placed with the head towards the south, looking towards the west, and were placed with rush matting both above and below the corpse. The most ancient pottery pieces were shiny red recipients with black edges, known as “black-topped” pieces. These were mainly in the form of plates or ovoid vases with wide open mouths. In the Naqada II epoch the culture expanded to the north and the south. Black topped vases were still produced but the typologies became more varied and the forms refined. Moreover, two types of pottery have been documented: that made from coarse clay and that from a marly one. The latter exhibited geometric and decorative drawings in ochre over a cream under-colour. The predominant motif is a boat, showing the importance of the river as a means of communication to the north and the south. This is accompanied by human figures, standards and animals such as flamingos and goats, among others. In the Naqada III Period the typological novelties are the vessels called “wavy handled”. These are long with characteristic motifs of ochre lines that cross over each other along the body and which seem to have been copied from basket weaving.

The red colour of the black-topped jars was achieved through the use of engobe. The exterior surface was covered with liquid clay mixed with water and red ochre (from earth with ferrous minerals) after the first drying and before the firing. The black was obtained when, after the firing, the vessel was placed head down in the embers. The carbonization of the part submerged produced the black colour.


BIBLIOGRAPHY:

- DERRICKS, Claire. Antiquités égyptiennes au Musée Royal de Mariemont. Morlanwelz, - Belgique. 2010.
- GUIDOTTI, Maria Cristina. Materiale Predinastico del Museo Egizio di Firenze. MAAT - Materiali del Museo Egizio di FIrenze 4. Firenze. 2006.
- PETRIE, Flinders. Corpus of Prehistoric Pottery and Palettes. British School of Archaeology in Egypt. London. 1921
- TEETER, Emily (ed). Before the Pyramids. The Origins of Egyptian Civilization. Oriental Institue Museum Publications 33. The Oriental Institue of the University of Chicago. Chicago. 2011.
- V. AMAT, Paulino. La cerámica Black Top. Estudio de cerámica predinástica egipcia. Barcelona. 2010.
- WODZINSKA, Anna. A manual of Egyptian Pottery. Volume 1: Fayum A - Lower Egyptian Culture. Ancient Egypt Research Associates. Boston. 2009.


Notes:
- The piece includes authenticity certificate.
- The piece includes Spanish Export License (Passport for European Union). NOT TAXES.
- According to Spanish legislation, items sent outside the European Union are subject to export taxes and will be added to the invoice, at the buyer's expense. These export fees are fixed on the final auction price and the tax rate is not applied directly on the total value of the item to be exported, but rather the different percentages by sections are applied to it:
- Up to 6,000 euros: 5%.
- From 6.001 to 60.000 euros: 10%.
This export permit application process can take between 1-2 months maximum.
- The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.

卖家故事

古代艺术画廊 - 位于巴塞罗那的考古学,拥有超过 15 年的经验。擅长古典艺术、埃及艺术、亚洲艺术和前哥伦布时期艺术。它保证其所有作品的真实性。它参加了西班牙最重要的艺术博览会,例如 Feriaarte,以及国外的博览会,BRAFA、Parcours des Mondes、Cultures Brussels。 所有作品均附有西班牙文化部颁发的出口许可证。 我们通过 DHL Express 或 Direct Art Transport 快速发货。
使用Google翻译翻译

Black Top Vase with mark (water)

- very rare -

Ancient Egypt, Predynastic Period, Naqada I - II, 4000 - 3500 BC

MATERIAL: Pottery

DIMENSIONS: 19 cm Height.

PROVENANCE:
Private collection of Mr. Kobayashi, France, acquired on a trip to Egypt in the 1970s.

CONDITION: In good condition in general. Intact.

DESCRIPTION:

A pottery vessel belonging to the type known as “black-topped” as the upper area of the jar is black in colour. This example is quite a large jar for Predynastic productions. The body is ovoid, with a stable, but very small base to allow it to stand upright. The rim is slightly everted. It presents the mark of what could be the hieroglyph representing "water", and possibly a half figure of a fish can be seen underneath.

The red colour of the black-topped jars was achieved through the use of engobe. The exterior surface was covered with liquid clay mixed with water and red ochre (from earth with ferrous minerals) after the first drying and before the firing. The black was obtained when, after the firing, the vessel was placed head down in the embers. The carbonization of the part submerged produced the black colour.

More than 5000 years ago, around 3150 BC, Narmer, the king of Upper Egypt, conquered the area of the Nile Delta and united the fertile valley of the river into one kingdom, founding in this manner what would be one of the most splendid empire in antiquity, and becoming himself its first pharaoh. With this act, the Dynastic Period of Egyptian history began, which would last for more than 3000 years until the conquest of Egypt by Octavio and its assimilation as a Roman province.

But before the arrival of Narmer, and over a period of almost a millennium, the social, cultural and religious foundations of the future splendour of Egyptian civilization had already been laid in what is known as the Predynastic Period. This corresponds to the Chalcolithic, the Age of Copper, and must be considered to be divided into three stages. In Upper Egypt, the village of El-Badari became the nucleus of the groups known as the Badari culture (4400-3800 BC). The Amratian culture or Naqada I (4000–3500 BC) developed in parallel and then replaced the former. This was followed by the Gerzean or Naqada II (3500-3200 BC) and the Protodynastic or Naqada III (3200-3000 BC). Both the names Amratia and Gerzeh derive from sites where the oldest vestiges from these phases were found: El-Amrah, in Upper Egypt and el-Gerzeh, in Middle Egypt. The name Naqada, was given to these periods by Werner Kaiser, and was from the name of the city of Naqada, situated on the Banks of the Nile, 25 km north of Luxor.

This chronological division, in periods and cultures, derives from the study of the cultural material found in different burials, found both by Flinders Petrie, and later, by Kaiser. These burials had similar characteristics: a hole dug in the desert in which the deceased was buried in a foetal position. The dryness of the desert ensured the mummification of the body, thus conserving it for eternity. Grave goods were placed around the body, and these were principally: pieces of jewellery, vases in both terracotta and stone, cosmetic palettes, and knives and other flint tools. Although this was a formative period, objects of considerable artistic quality were made, and it was the moment of splendour for pottery vases, as well as for stone vases in a multitude of forms and typologies. One of these burial sites can be seen today in the British Museum.

Thanks to the volume and varied typology of pottery vases, Petrie established a classification of the types found at Naqada and called this Sequence Dating (SD). The result was a table with 50 SD numbers from 30 onward, so as to be able to incorporate ancient cultures and knives that were not known. The Badarian was established between SD 21-29; Naqada I between 30-38; Naqada II between 36-60 and Naqada III between SD 61-80. Later, Kaiser refined Petrie’s system, which is still valid today.

During the Naqada I Period tombs were individual or multiple, in the case of tombs of a woman and a child. The deceased were placed with the head towards the south, looking towards the west, and were placed with rush matting both above and below the corpse. The most ancient pottery pieces were shiny red recipients with black edges, known as “black-topped” pieces. These were mainly in the form of plates or ovoid vases with wide open mouths. In the Naqada II epoch the culture expanded to the north and the south. Black topped vases were still produced but the typologies became more varied and the forms refined. Moreover, two types of pottery have been documented: that made from coarse clay and that from a marly one. The latter exhibited geometric and decorative drawings in ochre over a cream under-colour. The predominant motif is a boat, showing the importance of the river as a means of communication to the north and the south. This is accompanied by human figures, standards and animals such as flamingos and goats, among others. In the Naqada III Period the typological novelties are the vessels called “wavy handled”. These are long with characteristic motifs of ochre lines that cross over each other along the body and which seem to have been copied from basket weaving.

The red colour of the black-topped jars was achieved through the use of engobe. The exterior surface was covered with liquid clay mixed with water and red ochre (from earth with ferrous minerals) after the first drying and before the firing. The black was obtained when, after the firing, the vessel was placed head down in the embers. The carbonization of the part submerged produced the black colour.


BIBLIOGRAPHY:

- DERRICKS, Claire. Antiquités égyptiennes au Musée Royal de Mariemont. Morlanwelz, - Belgique. 2010.
- GUIDOTTI, Maria Cristina. Materiale Predinastico del Museo Egizio di Firenze. MAAT - Materiali del Museo Egizio di FIrenze 4. Firenze. 2006.
- PETRIE, Flinders. Corpus of Prehistoric Pottery and Palettes. British School of Archaeology in Egypt. London. 1921
- TEETER, Emily (ed). Before the Pyramids. The Origins of Egyptian Civilization. Oriental Institue Museum Publications 33. The Oriental Institue of the University of Chicago. Chicago. 2011.
- V. AMAT, Paulino. La cerámica Black Top. Estudio de cerámica predinástica egipcia. Barcelona. 2010.
- WODZINSKA, Anna. A manual of Egyptian Pottery. Volume 1: Fayum A - Lower Egyptian Culture. Ancient Egypt Research Associates. Boston. 2009.


Notes:
- The piece includes authenticity certificate.
- The piece includes Spanish Export License (Passport for European Union). NOT TAXES.
- According to Spanish legislation, items sent outside the European Union are subject to export taxes and will be added to the invoice, at the buyer's expense. These export fees are fixed on the final auction price and the tax rate is not applied directly on the total value of the item to be exported, but rather the different percentages by sections are applied to it:
- Up to 6,000 euros: 5%.
- From 6.001 to 60.000 euros: 10%.
This export permit application process can take between 1-2 months maximum.
- The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.

卖家故事

古代艺术画廊 - 位于巴塞罗那的考古学,拥有超过 15 年的经验。擅长古典艺术、埃及艺术、亚洲艺术和前哥伦布时期艺术。它保证其所有作品的真实性。它参加了西班牙最重要的艺术博览会,例如 Feriaarte,以及国外的博览会,BRAFA、Parcours des Mondes、Cultures Brussels。 所有作品均附有西班牙文化部颁发的出口许可证。 我们通过 DHL Express 或 Direct Art Transport 快速发货。
使用Google翻译翻译
文化
古埃及
Name of object
带标记(水)的黑顶花瓶。,Naqada I,公元前 4000 - 3500 年。 19 厘米高。
世纪/时段
Predynastic Period, Naqada I - II, 4000 - 3500 BC
起源
私人收藏
国家
未知
材质
陶瓷
状态
很好

2113 条评价 (760 过去的12个月)
  1. 753
  2. 7
  3. 0

goede foto's, goede omschrijving, goed verpakt en snel verzonden.

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ooco

molto bello tutto ok

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user-1eda53fd0e14

Pezzo come da descrizione, davvero notevole. Venditore molto consigliato in quanto gentile e disponibile. spedizione molto veloce. Ottimo!

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user-036f0e14b5a3

Venditore davvero ottimo e gentile. Merce come da descrizione, spedizione veloce. Ottimo l'avere certificato di autenticità.

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user-036f0e14b5a3

Un 100 como empresa un 100 como envío . Empresa muy especial con mucha exquisitez en todos los productos y en personal . Muchas gracias

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user-d9ece08

Very nice and fine cut little jewel! Well packed too! Thanks!

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lucvdk

nice piece and very fast shipping!

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user-90218523fc43

Es una maravilla de moneda, donde se le nota los pasos de los años y me encanta. Servido muy rápido y bien empaquetado. Con su certificación. Qué más se puede pedir?

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user-80677cb61840

Snelle en correcte levering, alleen was de verpakking voor het schilderij niet stevig genoeg.

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user-47946eed0bd7

Herzlichen Dank!

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user-ddbf70d32a50

All OK and with very fast shipping.

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chrisgtv

Prachtig schilderij. Zo blij mee. Zeer nette verkoper en zeer snelle levering.

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SNLMOVR

perfect ! very fast and high quality delivery !

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user-585d25979c1d

All well! Thanks.

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user-ccb692a05b84

Vendeur très professionnel, top +++×

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jean-phi

Photos trop contrastées pour bien percevoir les défauts, mais ces défauts étaient visibles pour autant. Le "Bon état" est trompeur. Sinon, envoi rapide et correctement emballé. Frais de port exagérés.

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user-f296769

Great communication, delivery and product. Came with a well made certificate of authenticity and good packaging. Overall very happy with the purchase! Delivery is a bit expensive, but I recommend it

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user-c736719174d8

Magnifique témoin du passé, envoyé avec tous les justificatifs, impeccable. Encore une fois très satisfait, un grand merci

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user-6f64011fed06

Thank you for the Special offer and the fast shipping of this excellent piece of art!

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user-aeb0450c0ddb

very good description of the object, very good price for this rare item,. Fast sending (has been at my place 2 days after buying!). Definitely would buy again.

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user-1f43cec94a8a

As described, perfect logistic

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Run999

great seller, everything came as should with certificate of authenticity

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user-6375c99aa6f2

Exceptionally well packaged, description aligned with positing received

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user-1ee663b
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2113 条评价 (760 过去的12个月)
  1. 753
  2. 7
  3. 0

goede foto's, goede omschrijving, goed verpakt en snel verzonden.

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ooco

免责声明

卖家保证并能证明该物品是合法获取的。 Catawiki 通知卖家,他们必须提供其居住国法律法规所要求的文件。 卖家保证并有权出售/出口此物品。 卖家将向买家提供有关该物品的所有已知的原产地信息。 卖家确保已经/将安排任何必要的许可。 卖家将立即通知买家有关获得此类许可可能产生的任何延误。

卖家保证并能证明该物品是合法获取的。 Catawiki 通知卖家,他们必须提供其居住国法律法规所要求的文件。 卖家保证并有权出售/出口此物品。 卖家将向买家提供有关该物品的所有已知的原产地信息。 卖家确保已经/将安排任何必要的许可。 卖家将立即通知买家有关获得此类许可可能产生的任何延误。