AMMAN — In the past it was thought that Ayyubid-Mamluk pottery was completely different from preceding Early Islamic pottery because of changes in manufacture and decoration. Recently, scholars ...
Today the ministry of antiquities took all legal procedures to recover a Mamluk glass vase from London. Ali Ahmed, the head of the Antiquities Recuperation Department, told Ahram Online that the vase ...
AMMAN — By the 14th century, Tell Hisban, located around 25km south of Amman, significant centre of pottery, according to a Syrian scholar. The ancient town was a district capital of the Mamluk Empire ...
Amar Z. 2003. Transformations in the Agriculture of al-Sham during the Mamluk period (1250–1517 CE). In A.M. Maeir, S. Dar and Z. Safrai eds. The Rural Landscape of Ancient Israel. Oxford. Pp. 149–158 ...
Avissar M. and Stern E. 2005. Pottery of the Crusader, Ayyubid, and Mamluk Periods in Israel (IAA Reports 26). Jerusalem. Avshalom-Gorni D. 2000. A Burial Cave of the Byzantine Period at Bet She’an.
"This catalogue is published to coincide with the exhibition, Gilded and Glazed: Mamluk glass and Iznik pottery, held at the Sheraton Doha Hotel, 2-13 March 2003." -- T. p. verso.