Most of the Renaissance sgraffito tiles excavated in Udine (Italy) constitute a homogeneous group, the tile body having a CaO/MgO molar ratio ? 3:2. They were produced using a dolomite- and calcite-containing clay fired at 900-950 °C. A small group of samples, with a lower firing temperature and a CaO/MgO ratio ? 2:3, was probably produced in a different factory. Slip and transparent glaze, characterized by optical microscopy and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry, are an illite-rich clay and a lead silicate, respectively.

Archaeometric investigations of sgraffito ceramic tiles (fifteenth-sixteenth centuries) recovered from excavations in Udine (North-East Italy)

Fabbri B;Gualtieri S;
2000

Abstract

Most of the Renaissance sgraffito tiles excavated in Udine (Italy) constitute a homogeneous group, the tile body having a CaO/MgO molar ratio ? 3:2. They were produced using a dolomite- and calcite-containing clay fired at 900-950 °C. A small group of samples, with a lower firing temperature and a CaO/MgO ratio ? 2:3, was probably produced in a different factory. Slip and transparent glaze, characterized by optical microscopy and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry, are an illite-rich clay and a lead silicate, respectively.
2000
Ceram
Characterization
Glaze
Inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry
Italy
Optical microscopy
Renaissance
Sgraffito
Slip
Tiles
Udine
X-ray diffraction
X-ray fluorescence
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/326602
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