Chinese white ware porcelain dish (left), 9th century, excavated in Iran, and a fritware dish made in Iran (right), 12th century. British Museum.
İznik pottery, an example of fritware

Fritware, also known as stone-paste, is a type of pottery in which frit (ground quartz and glass) is added to clay to reduce its fusion temperature and create a white, strong, thin-walled vessel. The mixture may include quartz or other siliceous material. An organic compound such as gum or glue may be added for binding. The resulting mixture can be fired at a lower temperature than clay alone. A glaze is then applied on the surface to harden the object.

Composition and Techniques

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Fritware was invented in the Medieval Islamic world to give a strong white body, which, combined with tin-glazing of the surface, allowed it to approximate the white color, translucency, and thin walls of Chinese porcelain. True porcelain was not manufactured in the Islamic world until modern times, and most fine Islamic pottery was made of fritware. Frit was also a significant component in some early European porcelains.

Although its production centers may have shifted with time and imperial power Fritware remained in consistent use throughout the Islamic world with little significant innovation[1]. The technique is used to create many other significant artistic traditions such as Lustreware, Raqqa ware, and Iznik pottery.[2][3]

History

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'Frit' is crushed silica that is used in ceramics. The pottery produced from the manufacture of frit is often called 'fritware' but has also been referred to as "stonepaste" and "faience" among other names.[4] Fritware was innovative because the glaze and the body of the ceramic piece were made of nearly the same materials allowing them to fuse better and less likely to flake and could also be fired at a lower temperature.[5] Such traditions of low firing temperatures were not at all uncommon throughout the Middle East and Central Asia, having examples of the technique dating back to the 11th c. BCE when it may have been developed.[6]

The manufacture of proto-fritware began in Iraq in the 9th century under the Abbasid Caliphate,[7] and with the establishment of Samarra as its capital in 836 CE there is extensive evidence of ceramics in the court of the Abbasids both in Samarra and Baghdad.[8] A ninth-century corpus of 'proto-stonepaste' from Baghdad has "relict glass fragments" in its fabric.[4] The glass is alkali-lime-lead-silica and, when the paste was fired or cooled, wollastonite and diopside crystals formed within the glass fragments. The lack of "inclusions of crushed pottery" suggests these fragments did not come from a glaze.[4] The reason for their addition would have been to release alkali into the matrix on firing, which would "accelerate vitrification at a relatively low firing temperature, and thus increase the hardness and density of the [ceramic] body."[4]

 
Blue and White Bowl with Radial Design, 13th century - Iran.Brooklyn Museum.

Following the fall of the Abbasid Caliphate, the main center of manufacture moved to Egypt where true fritware was invented between the 10th and the 12th centuries under the Fatimids, but the technique then spread throughout the Middle East.[7]

There are many variations on designs, color, and composition, the last often attributed to the differences in mineral compositions of soil and rock used in the production of fritware.[2] The bodies of the fritware ceramics were always made quite thin to imitate their porcelain counterparts in China, a practice not common before the discovery of the frit technique which produced stronger ceramics.[5] In the 13th century the town of Kashan in Iran was an important center for the production of fritware.[9] Abū'l-Qāsim, who came from a family of tilemakers in the city, wrote a treatise in 1301 on precious stones that included a chapter on the manufacture of fritware.[10] His recipe specified a fritware body containing a mixture of 10 parts silica to 1 part glass frit and 1 part clay. The frit was prepared by mixing powdered quartz with soda which acted as a flux. The mixture was then heated in a kiln.[11]

The internal circulation of pottery within the Islamic world from its earliest days was quite common, with the movement of ideas regarding pottery without their physical presence in certain areas being readily apparent.[12] The movement of fritware into China - whose monopoly on porcelain production had prompted the Islamic world to produce fritware to begin with - impacted Chinese porcelain decoration, deriving the signature cobalt blue color motif from Islamic traditions of fritware decoration.[13] The transfer of this artistic idea was likely a consequence of the enhanced connection and trade relations between the Middle and Near East and Far East Asia under the Mongols beginning in the 13th century.[13] The Middle and Near East had an initial monopoly on the cobalt color due to its own richness in cobalt ore, which was especially abundant in Qamsar and Anarak in Persia.[14]

 
12th Century Glazed Stonepaste Chess set, Metropolitan Museum of Art 1973
 
Fritware dish with grape design, Iznik pottery, Turkey, 1550–70. British Museum.[15]

Iznik pottery was produced in Ottoman Turkey beginning in the last quarter of 15th century AD.[3] It consists of a body, slip, and glaze, where the body and glaze are 'quartz-frit'.[3] The 'frits' in both cases "are unusual in that they contain lead oxide as well as soda"; the lead oxide would help reduce the thermal expansion coefficient of the ceramic.[3] Microscopic analysis reveals that the material that has been labeled 'frit' is 'interstitial glass' which serves to connect the quartz particles.[3] The glass was added as frit and the interstitial glass formed on firing.

Applications

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Fritware served a wide variety of purposes in the Medieval Islamic world. As a porcelain substitute the fritware technique was used to craft bowls, vases, and pots as both symbols of luxury as well as to more practical ends.[2] It was similarly used by Medieval tilemakers to craft strong tiles with a colorless body that provide a suitable base for underglaze and decoration[8] Fritware was also known to be used to craft objects beyond simply pottery and tiling. It was also found to be used in the twelfth century to make objects like chess sets.[16] There is also a tradition of using fritware to create intricate figurines, with surviving examples from the Seljuk Empire.[17]

It was also commonly used as the basis for the Islamic art of Lustreware, an Islamic ceramics technique that put luster into a glazed piece of pottery.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Mason, Robert (1995). "New Looks at Old Pots: Results of Recent Multidisciplinary Studies of Glazed Ceramics from the Islamic World". Muqarnas. 12: 1–10 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ a b c d Redford, Scott; Blackman, M. James (1997-01-01). "Luster and Fritware Production and Distribution in Medieval Syria". Journal of Field Archaeology. 24 (2): 233–247. doi:10.1179/009346997792208230. ISSN 0093-4690.
  3. ^ a b c d e Tite, M.S. "Iznik pottery: an investigation of the methods of production". Archaeometry. 31: 115–132.
  4. ^ a b c d Mason, R.B.; Tite, M.S. "The beginnings of Islamic stonepaste technology". Archaeometry. 36: 77–91.
  5. ^ a b Arthur Lane (1947). Early Islamic Pottery.
  6. ^ Raghavan, Raju. "Ceramics in China". Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures: 1103–1117.
  7. ^ a b Archaeological chemistry by Zvi Goffer p.254
  8. ^ a b Watson, Oliver (2017). Necipoglu, Gulru; Flood, Finbarr (eds.). A Companion to Islamic Art and Architecture. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 478–499. ISBN 9781119068662.
  9. ^ Atasoy & Raby 1989, p. 50.
  10. ^ Allan, J.W. "Abu'l-Qasim's Treatise on Ceramics". Internet Archive Wayback Machine. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= requires |archive-url= (help); Check date values in: |archive-date= (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ Allan 1973; Mason & Tite 1994
  12. ^ Watson, Oliver (2017). Ceramics and Circulation: A Companion to Islamic Art and Architecture. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 478–500.
  13. ^ a b Medley, Margaret (1975). "Islam, Chinese Porcelain and Ardabīl". Iran. 13: 31–37. doi:10.2307/4300524. ISSN 0578-6967.
  14. ^ Zucchiatti, A.; Bouquillon, A.; Katona, I.; D'Alessandro, A. "The 'Della Robbia Blue': A Case Study for the Use of Cobalt Pigments in Ceramics during the Italian Renaissance". Archaeometry. 48: 131–152 – via Wiley Online Library.
  15. ^ Atasoy, Nurhan (1989). Iznik: The Pottery of Ottoman Turkey. London: Alexandra Press. ISBN 9780500973745.. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  16. ^ Kenney, Ellen (2011). "Chess Set". MET Museum. Retrieved November 26, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  17. ^ Court and cosmos : the great age of the Seljuqs. Canby, Sheila R.,, Beyazit, Deniz,, Rugiadi, Martina,, Peacock, A. C. S. (Andrew C. S.),, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.),. New York. ISBN 978-1-58839-589-4. OCLC 926820927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: others (link)

Further reading

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  • Mason, Robert B.; Gonnella, Julia (2000). "The petrology of Syrian stonepaste ceramics: the view from Aleppo". Internet Archaeology. 9. doi:10.11141/ia.9.10.
  • Tite, M.S.; Wolf, S.; Mason, R.B. (2011). "The technological development of stonepaste ceramics from the Islamic Middle East". Journal of Archaeological Science. 38 (3): 570–580. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2010.10.011..
  • "Technology of Frit Making in Iznik." Okyar F. Euro Ceramics VIII, Part 3. Trans Tech Publications. 2004, p. 2391-2394. Published for The European Ceramic Society.
  • Pancaroğlu, O. (2007). Perpetual glory: Medieval Islamic ceramics from the Harvey B. Plotnick Collection (1055933707 805629715 M. Bayani, Trans.). Chicago, IL: Art Institute of Chicago.
  • Watson, O. (2004). Ceramics from Islamic lands. New York, NY: Thames & Hudson.

Category:Pottery Category:Arabic pottery Category:Iranian pottery Category:Ceramic materials Category:Islamic pottery Category:Arab inventions