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Terra sigillata
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===South Gaulish samian ware=== [[File:Kom in terra sigillata met reliëfversiering, 50 tot 85 NC, vindplaats- Tongeren, Kielenstraat, 1992, houtlemen ambachtswijk, kuil, collectie Gallo-Romeins Museum Tongeren, TO92-017-921.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Terra sigillata bowl, produced in [[La Graufesenque]], 50-85 A.D., found in Tongeren. [[Gallo-Roman Museum, Tongeren, Belgium]]]] [[File:South Gaulish samian Dr 29 2.JPG|thumb|270px|right|South Gaulish Dragendorff 29, late 1st century AD. [[British Museum]], London]] Sigillata vessels, both plain and decorated, were manufactured at several centres in southern France, including [[Bram, Aude|Bram]], [[Montans]], La Graufesenque, [[Le Rozier]] and [[Banassac]],<ref>See Tyers 1996, p. 106, fig. 90 for a map of the Gaulish production sites</ref> from the late 1st century BC: of these, La Graufesenque, near Millau, was the principal producer and exporter. Although the establishment of sigillata potteries in Gaul may well have arisen initially to meet local demand and to undercut the prices of imported Italian goods, they became enormously successful in their own right, and by the later 1st century AD, South Gaulish samian was being exported not only to other provinces in the north-west of the Empire, but also to Italy and other regions of the Mediterranean, North Africa and even the eastern Empire. One of the finds in the ruins of [[Pompeii]], destroyed by the eruption of [[Vesuvius]] in August AD 79, was a consignment of South Gaulish sigillata, still in its packing crate;<ref>Atkinson, D., "A hoard of Samian ware from Pompeii", ''Journal of Roman Studies'' 4 (1914), pp. 26–64</ref> like all finds from the Vesuvian sites, this hoard of pottery is invaluable as dating evidence. [[File:Roman pottery South Gaulish samian ware.jpg|thumb|250px|South Gaulish plain forms, showing standardisation of size. Millau Museum, France]] South Gaulish samian typically has a redder slip and deeper pink fabric than Italian sigillata. The best slips, vivid red and of an almost mirror-like brilliance, were achieved during the [[Emperor Claudius|Claudian]] and early [[Nero]]nian periods (Claudius, ''reg''. AD 41–54; Nero, ''reg''. AD 54–68). At the same period, some workshops experimented briefly with a marbled red-and-yellow slip, a variant that never became generally popular.<ref>Johns 1977, p. 12, Pl.II</ref> Early production of plain forms in South Gaul initially followed the Italian models closely, and even the characteristic Arretine decorated form, Dragendorff 11, was made. But many new shapes quickly evolved, and by the second half of the 1st century AD, when Italian sigillata was no longer influential, South Gaulish samian had created its own characteristic repertoire of forms. The two principal decorated forms were Dragendorff 30, a deep, cylindrical bowl, and Dragendorff 29, a carinated ('keeled') shallow bowl with a marked angle, emphasised by a moulding, mid-way down the profile. The footring is low, and potters' stamps are usually bowl-maker's marks placed in the interior base, so that vessels made from the same, or parallel, moulds may bear different names. The rim of the 29, small and upright in early examples of the form, but much deeper and more everted by the 70s of the 1st century, is finished with rouletted decoration,{{efn|'Rouletted' decoration: this is a regular, notched surface texture, created by using a tool with a toothed wheel (''roulette'') to impress the pattern on the bowl before the clay was hard. It is also possible that it was sometimes made by holding a blade-like tool against the vessel as it turned on the wheel, allowing the tool to judder against the surface of the clay.}} and the relief-decorated surfaces necessarily fall into two narrow zones. These were usually decorated with floral and foliate designs of wreaths and scrolls at first: the Dr.29 resting on its rim illustrated in the lead section of this article is an early example, less angular than the developed form of the 60s and 70s, with decoration consisting of simple, very elegant leaf-scrolls. Small human and animal figures, and more complex designs set out in separate panels, became more popular by the 70s of the 1st century. Larger human and animal figures could be used on the Dr.30 vessels, but while many of these have great charm, South Gaulish craftsmen never achieved, and perhaps never aspired to, the Classical naturalism of some of their Italian counterparts. [[File:Samian ware bowl by Mercato.JPG|thumb|220px|South Gaulish bowl, Dr.37, from the late 1st century AD, with a stamp of the potter Mercato in the decoration. British Museum]] In the last two decades of the 1st century, the Dragendorff 37, a deep, rounded vessel with a plain upright rim, overtook the 29 in popularity. This simple shape remained the standard Gaulish samian relief-decorated form, from all Gaulish manufacturing regions, for more than a century. Small relief-decorated [[Beaker (archaeology)|beakers]] such as forms Déchelette 67 and Knorr 78 were also made in South Gaul, as were occasional 'one-off' or very ambitious mould-made vessels, such as large thin-walled flagons and flasks.<ref>Examples of these may be found in Hermet's own type-sequence, Hermet 1934, Pl.4—5</ref> But the mass of South Gaulish samian found on Roman sites of the 1st century AD consists of plain dishes, bowls and cups, especially Dr.18 (a shallow dish) and Dr.27 (a little cup with a distinctive double curve to the profile), many of which bear potters' name-stamps, and the large decorated forms 29, 30 and 37. A local industry inspired by Arretine and South Gaulish imports grew up in the [[Iberia]]n provinces in the 1st century AD. ''Terra sigillata hispanica'' developed its own distinctive forms and designs, and continued in production into the late Roman period, the 4th and 5th centuries AD. It was not exported to other regions.
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