Convex-sided, flat-bottomed travertine bowl with plain rim. Small section of the rim now missing. Fr (cont.)
Convex-sided, flat-bottomed travertine bowl with plain rim. From grave 993 at Tarkhan, excavated by (cont.)
A sherd of a pottery vessel from Armant (grave 1704). It is possibly part of a bowl made of volcanic (cont.)
Two sherds of a large pottery bowl. It is fine walled and burnished black inside with a red exterior (cont.)
One sherd of a large pottery bowl, fine walled and burnished black on the inside. The outside is dec (cont.)
One rim and two body sherds of a bowl of a fine-walled fabric, burnished black on the interior. The (cont.)
Rim/body sherd of a Pan-Grave deep bowl with slightly inflected walls and modelled rim. The shape is (cont.)
Three joined fragments of a rim and upper body sherd from a bag-shaped bowl. The exterior surface is (cont.)
Base of a small ovoid juglet with a knob base. The exterior is coated and burnished, with dark red/b (cont.)
The rim and several sherds from a fine ware bowl with mending holes. The bowl would have had a round (cont.)
A sherd from a carinated bowl of red, fine fabric burnished inside and out. It was excavated at Arma (cont.)
A rim sherd of a brown fabric, burnished on the outside. The fabric has calcite inclusions. It dates (cont.)
Fragment of a stone bowl from the Mond excavations at Armant. 30x20mm.
1 sherd of pottery from Armant. Green/black glaze, several mm thick on interior. Possibly part of bo (cont.)
1 sherd of pottery from Armant. Part of a blue glazed pot with flower decoration. The Petrie Museum (cont.)
Small open-formed dish/bowl. Made from Nile Silt Clay. In the interior, burnt out chaff is present. (cont.)
A dark blue faience rim sherd of a marsh bowl or lotus bowl. It is painted inside and out with linea (cont.)
2 black stone bowls. One labelled 'Cairo 110' height 4.3cm. greatest diam.8.5cm., other height 6cm., (cont.)
A bronze necked bowl with rounded shoulders and a broken rim. It was decorated with two fine sets of (cont.)
This small bowl is a so-called "hemispherical cup", one of the most typical forms for the Egyptian M (cont.)