This fragment is roughly one-quarter of an underglaze painted blue and white tin-glazed earthenware tile. The tile could have been used in a variety of ways, including overlaying a hearth to help reflect the heat of fire into a room; creating fire-protected surfaces; skirting walls to prevent mice and other vermin from entering interior spaces; covering walls where frequent activity created dirt and providing more easily washed surfaces; and as decoration (van Lemmen 1997, 36-37). It has also been suggested that delftware tiles decorated with biblical scenes may have been used to help children learn scripture (Gerhauser 2016). The hand-painted decoration features a central scene enclosed within two concentric circles. This central design includes a European style figure playing some kind of wind musical instrument (identified as European based on plumed cap, a kind of hat associated with European fashion); reeds; and parts of a tree. The design represents a possibly Biblical, pastoral, or mythological scene (Gerhauser 2016; Stiner 2010, 27; Pluis 1997). The corner design is probably a variation on the oxhead foliate corner design (Gerhauser 2016).
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Object number
1296.01
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Date made
Late seventeenth to early eighteenth-century
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Dimensions
Height 6 cm
Width 7 cm
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Decoration
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Color
Cobalt Blue
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Animals/objects
Tile
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Category
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Class
Ceramic
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Material
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Context
Lot 9, Test Cut AR, Late-18th/Early-19th-Privy Deposit, Strata XVI (544.1296)
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Ware types
Tin Glazed (Delft)
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Techniques
Press Molded