Dating westerwald stoneware marks


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Дата публикации: 29.11.2021

Dating westerwald stoneware marks

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This style of pottery actually has origins in Raeren, which after World War I became a municipality of Belgium. Geographically, Westerwald is located within a low mountain range nestled between the Sieg, Lahn and Rhine Rivers. Westerwald Stoneware. As migrant potters began to settle into the area with the molds they brought from Siegburg and Raeren, stoneware production spread from these towns to outlying sites at Hilgert, Hillscheid, Ransbach, Baumbach, Mogendorf and Vallende.

What Are Westerwald Stonewares?

STONEWARE, RHENISH BLUE AND GRAY – Type Index Date Range: ​ production shifted to the Westerwald region by the end of the 16th century, and Westerwald blue and grey stonewares dominated exports after that time.

We use cookies to make our website work more efficiently, to provide you with more personalised services or advertising to you, and to analyse traffic on our website. For more information on how we use cookies and how to manage cookies, please follow the ‘Read more’ link, otherwise select ‘Accept and close’. Skip to main content Please enable JavaScript in your web browser to get the best experience. Read more about our cookie policy Accept and close the cookie policy. Museum number , Description Stoneware pedestal urn; grey salt glaze; turned pedestal foot and neck; spiral lug handles; vertically gadrooned upper and lower body; body – exaggerated band, stamped foliage; central baluster band – arcaded portraits, kings of Poland, France and Spain, opposite their queens supporting armorial shields; merchants’ mark; date.

Production date circa. Materials stoneware. Ware Raeren Stoneware Westerwald Stoneware. Technique salt-glazed. Dimensions Diameter: 71 millimetres base Diameter: 40 millimetres rim Height: Curator’s comments Jones ‘Renaissance’ Rhenish stoneware One of the most important developments in Continental ceramic technology during the later Middle Ages was the discovery of the technique of salt-glazed stoneware in the Rhineland.

Potteries at Siegburg, Cologne and Raeren, for instance, exported their hard-fired, non-porous and highly durable wares as far as Britain, the Low Countries and Scandinavia.