
Sue pottery - Wikipedia
Sue pottery (須恵器, sueki, literally offering ware) was a blue-gray form of stoneware pottery fired at high temperature, which was produced in Japan and southern Korea during the Kofun, …
Susan Ware - Wikipedia
Susan Ware (born August 22, 1950) is an American independent scholar, writer and editor who lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Hopkinton, New Hampshire.
Kofun period (ca. 300–710) - The Metropolitan Museum of Art
This jar is an example of the type of stoneware containers and stands known as Sue ware, produced from the middle of the fifth until the fourteenth century. Because the word sue means …
Sué ware | pottery | Britannica
Distinct from haji ware, it was high-fired and in its finished form had a gray cast. Occasionally, accidental ash glazing is found on the surface. Until the 7th century, sue ware was a product …
Author - Susan Ware
A pioneer in the field of women’s history and a leading feminist biographer, Susan Ware is the author and editor of numerous books on twentieth-century U.S. history.
Sue Ware - (History of Japan) - Vocab, Definition, Explanations
Sue ware refers to a type of ancient Japanese pottery that emerged during the Kofun period, characterized by its unique clay composition and distinctive glaze. It played a crucial role in the …
Earthen ware and Sue ware - Ceramics Story
Sue ware is a gray, hard ware whose production techniques were newly introduced from the Korean peninsula around the beginning of the 5th century, and was the most common …
Sue ware | Cerámica Wiki | Fandom
Sue ware (須恵器, sueki?, literally offering ware) was a blue-gray form of high-fired pottery which was produced in Japan and southern Korea during the Kofun, Nara, and Heian periods of …
Home :: Susan Ware
The celebrated feminist historian and biographer Susan Ware introduces her new book Why They Marched, a history of the women’s suffrage movement told through nineteen biographical …
The Development of Sue Ware Pottery - 東京国立博物館
Another type is Sue ware, which was fired in simple anagama kilns made by digging holes into sloped ground. Both the terms “Haji” and “Sue” derive from what pottery was called during the …
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