- Tankard
- Enlarge image
Tankard
- Place of origin:
Iran (made)
- Date:
1180-1220 (made)
- Credit Line:
Given by Mr C N Ades MBE in memory of his wife Andrée Ades
- Museum number:
C.155-1977
- Gallery location:
World Ceramics, room 145, case 35, shelf 2
This tankard is made from fritware (also called stone paste and quartz paste), an artificial ceramic body developed by Middle Eastern potters around the middle of the 11th century to imitate the hard, bright white body of imported Chinese porcelains. The main ingredient in fritware was fine quartz powder made by grinding sand or pebbles. Small quantities of white clay and a glassy substance known as frit were added – the clay to give plasticity, the frit to bind the body after firing. This tankard is covered with a transparent glaze which perfectly shows off the whiteness of the fritware body.
In the 12th and early 13th centuries, fritware was used in Kashan and other pottery centres in Iran to produce fine wares decorated in an astonishing range of styles. Since fritware holds a shape well, this allowed the potters to make copy the complex shapes of metalwork vessels, as in the case of this tankard, which was probably a drinking vessel.
This vessel was part of a hoard that was deliberately buried by its owner, probably a merchant who lived in Jurjan in north-east Iran, or who was passing through the city. In 1220, Jurjan was threatened by a Mongol invasion. The merchant packed the vessels in sand inside large storage jars and buried them for safekeeping. Soon afterwards, Jurjan was completely destroyed by the Mongols, and the owner never returned to recover the hoard.
As a result, the vessels in this hoard survived together for almost 800 years, and in relatively good condition. The probable date of their burial also gives us a good indication of when the vessels in the hoard were made, as well as showing the wide variety of types of decoration that were used to make Iranian pottery at this time.

