hammamet_3

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  • 2013-08-03T20:48:50Z ()
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  • 1 ()
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  • Hammamet 3 (en)
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  • This form of this type derives from a Punic tradition. It was first noted at the end of the 1990’s on several sites around the northern Hammamet Gulf (Bonifay, 2004a). It is a tall amphora with handles attached on the shoulder. The rim is thickened and grooved on the outer face. Four variants have been noted, from a heavy squared rim with a hanging underside (variant A) to a slimmer and taller rim, rounded on the upper side (variant D). The neck is quite short and cone shaped and the body cylindrical and wide. There are three variants for the solid spikes: cone shaped with an elongated foot, a cylindrical elongated foot with thickened base and a short cylindrical foot with a thickened base. Only one complete example is so far known, somewhat small in size, from Hadrian's Villa, in Italy (Panella in Caprino, 1999). (en)
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