|
National Archaeological Museum of Spain, Madrid ... English: Etruscan bucchero lebes gamikos, 4th century BC. From Magna Graacia. ... Español: Etrusco bucchero lebes nupcial, siglo IV. a.C. Procedencia: Magna Grecia.
|
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bucchero_lebes_gamikos_MAN.j...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bucchero_lebes_gamikos_MAN.jpg
|
|
|
|
This new type is the bucchero, which dominated Etruria from half way through the VII to the beginning of the V century B.C. The term derives from bucàro, a Portuguese term, which means fragrant and that was attributed to the Peruvian mixture similarly imitated in Portugal.
|
www.comune.santamarinella.rm.it/museo/html/inglese/a171...
www.comune.santamarinella.rm.it/museo/html/inglese/a1711.html
|
|
|
Britannica online encyclopedia article on bucchero ware (Etruscan pottery), Etruscan earthenware pottery common in pre-Roman Italy chiefly between about the 7th and early 5th century bc. Characteristically, the ware is black, sometimes gray, and often shiny from polishing. ... CREATE MY bucchero war... NEW DOCUMENT...
|
www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/82758/bucchero-ware
www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/82758/bucchero-ware
|
|
|
This elegant drinking-cup was made during the Etruscan Archaic period when bucchero ware was extremely popular. Bucchero went out of fashion in the fifth century BC, when it was widely replaced by painted pottery. ... Many of the bucchero shapes had continued from the previous century, the so-called Orientalising period.
|
www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_obje...
www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/gr/b/bucchero_ware_drinking_cup.aspx
|
|
|
This heavy-looking bucchero ware jug has a moulded foot and overhanging rim with five appliqué women's heads. The broad, flat handle, used for pouring, is ornamented with chevrons, while on the neck there is another female head and two swans. ... Chunky water-jug ... Etruscan, about 550-500 BC; From Chiusi, Tuscany, Italy...
|
www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_obje...
www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/gr/b/bucchero_ware_water_jug.aspx
|
|
Bucchero is the most distinctive class of ceramic produced in Etruria, Italy, between the 7th and the 5th centuries BC. This publication aims to provide a complete up-to-date listing and description of the collection of bucchero in the British Museum;
|
www.britishmuseumshoponline.org/invt/cmc0861591657
|
|
In addition, they created their own style of black pottery, bucchero, which was considered the most original ceramicware to come from this civilization. Bucchero is a very specific style dating back to the Etruscan period of the 7th-6th century B.C. and employs a very particular crafting process.
|
www.madeinmuseum.com/bucchero.html
www.madeinmuseum.com/bucchero.html
|
|
Oinochoe with Decorated Handle, inv. s. 45; Etruscan. 6th-5th BC ; Bucchero. H. 29.5 cm. W. 18 cm. Bucchero can be considered the "national pottery" of the Etruscans. The black sheen of bucchero ware was achieved not by a glaze, but by a special firing process known as reduction, which fires red clay black throughout.
|
www.sfsu.edu/~debellis/pgs45.htm
|
|
Description: Black thin-walled bucchero kantharos of a type popular throughout Etruria, and also widely exported. Some scholars suggest that the type inspired the development of the Attic kantharos.
|
www.fragmentsoftime.com/etr1920.htm
|
|