The Life of Pottery - La Tène ceramic production
Organised
by: Archaeological Museum in Zagreb
Venue: Archaeological Museum in Zagreb, Nikola
Šubić Zrinski Square 19
Duration: May 3rd - September
4th 2011
Author: Ivan Drnić
Type: archaeological, thematic
Users: all
Subject: Ceramic vessels and fragments are the
most frequent finds on the majority of archaeological sites.
Therefore, they are an important source of information on the
societies that produced and used them. From the Neolithic period
onwards they played an important part in every aspect of life of a
community: food preparation and storage, rituals and festivals,
metallurgy, and they were used as objects of exchange and
trade.
The story of ceramics is narrated through the Late Iron Age
material from the territory of Croatia, when the area between the
Sava and Drava was dominated by the Celtic La Tène culture. The
Celts introduced more advanced pottery-making technologies, such as
the fast potter's wheel and vertical pottery kilns, which resulted
in the mass production of vessels during the later part of this
period.
In order to present as effectively as possible the complex process
of ceramic production, from the acquiring and preparation of raw
material, through the modelling and ornamentation, firing, and,
finally, its usage, the exhibition is supplemented with precise
replicas of a potter's wheel and pottery kiln, video materials and
illustrations.
