Bronze Age, Cypriot — Tripod cooking pot — 1900 - 1800 B.C

Bronze Age, Cypriot, 1900 - 1800 B.C, Pottery, 130 mm x 128 mm Condition: Good condition. Documented provenance. Antikarts dossier with presentation, characteristics and traceability.
Archaeological cabinet

Detailed Description

Item: Tripod cooking pot.

Culture: Bronze Age, Cypriot.

Dating: 1900 - 1800 B.C.

Material: Pottery.

Dimensions: 130 mm x 128 mm.

Analysis & expertise

Record prepared for Antikarts from the photographs and technical information provided by the source.

Attributions and measurements are retained as cataloguing markers, without over-interpretation.

This entry is preserved in the Antikarts Museum as a documentary reference (no price displayed).

Characteristics

Item: Tripod cooking pot

Material: Pottery

Culture: Bronze Age, Cypriot

Period: 1900 - 1800 B.C

Dimensions: 130 mm x 128 mm

Condition: Good condition

Historical context

During the Bronze Age, expanding networks and new techniques reshaped societies. Ceramics, ornaments and tools document practices, exchange routes and regional identities.

Attribution: Bronze Age, Cypriot. Dating indicated: 1900 - 1800 B.C.

Cultural value

Preserved as a comparison anchor within the Antikarts corpus.

Primary value lies in typology, stated dating and the associated traceability trail.

Traceability & guarantees

Provenance (summary): Ex Emeritus collection (USA), collected from the 1950’s to the 1980’s by a distinguished university professor who served as Department head, Dean and Vice President of a major university..

Record preserved in the Antikarts Museum as a documentary reference.

Archived source: https://www.yourantiquarian.com/product/bronze-age-tripod-cooking-pot/.

Archaeological cabinet

Archaeological Identity Card

Material, chronological and cultural record for the object

Reference YA-9635
Period
Bronze Age, Cypriot
Date
1900 - 1800 B.C
Diameter
130 mm x 128 mm
Other References
YA-9635
Condition
Good condition
Provenance
Ex Emeritus collection (USA), collected from the 1950’s to the 1980’s by a distinguished university professor who served as Department head, Dean and Vice President of a major university.