词条 | tin-glazed earthenware |
释义 | tin-glazed earthenware pottery also called Tin-enameled Earthenware, ![]() The art of tin-glazing, discovered by the Assyrians and revived in Mesopotamia in about the 9th century, spread to Moorish Spain and was conveyed to Italy by way of the island of Majorca, whence the name majolica (maiolica), by which it is known in Italy. Italian majolica, particularly that made in Faenza, was much admired, and in the early 16th century it was imitated in France. The word faience, first applied to French tin-glazed earthenware and then to wares made in Spain, Scandinavia, and Germany, was certainly derived from Faenza. In the early 17th century, tin-glazed earthenware was made in Holland, in the town of Delft, whence the art was introduced into England. Delft thus refers to tin-glazed wares produced both in The Netherlands and in England. The word majolica is sometimes used loosely when applied to wares made in the Italian style but outside Italy, just as faience is used incorrectly when applied to Egyptian blue-glazed ware and certain kinds of Middle Eastern ware. |
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