Ceramic fragment.
Fragment of a Sanzeno bowl, restored by composing three sherds. Fine clay, from dark grey to black in colour, with a moderate temper of fine grained sand and cast gold; reduction firing; burnished.
Circumferential decoration in form of two deep, parallel running ribbons.
At two positions characters, inside in the area of the rim and outside on the bottom.
Further find circumstances unknown. Whatmough notes that Conway sees this and other sherds from Sanzeno in March 1908 and von Planta in October 1924; Whatmough indicates the sherd as unpublished and mentions only Sanzeno as find place (cp. PID: 21). According to Whatmough's notes the ceramic fragment must be found in the 19th century as well as it is probable that the sherd is in possession of the Tyrolean State Museum Ferdinandeum likewise since the 19th century.
The dating follows the common typology related to Sanzeno bowls.
Franz also mentions the potsherd but without given an inventory number or other information. His study regards only the inscription and the analogy to SZ-79 (cp. Franz 1959: 228 [below No. 2]).
Autopsied by the Thesaurus Inscriptionum Raeticarum in November 2013.
Franz 1959
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Leonhard Franz, "Rätische Inschriften im Innsbrucker Landesmuseum", Der Schlern 33 (1959), 228–229.
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LIR
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Alberto Mancini, Le Iscrizioni Retiche [= Quaderni del dipartimento di linguistica, Università degli studi di Firenze Studi 8–9], Padova: Unipress 2009–10. (2 volumes)
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