Author:
Choi Hyunkyung,Han Min Su,Moon Dong Hyeok,Kim Chul Sung,Nam Sang Won,Uhm Young Rang
Abstract
AbstractThe study analyzes the black color factors of black-burnished pottery excavated from the Pungnap Fortress and the Seokchon Tomb during the Hanseong period of the Baekje Kingdom. The current hypothesis surrounding the pottery’s black color factors suggests the use of magnetite, manganese oxide, and carbon. To compare the results of the black pottery, red pottery was used as the control group. To identify these black color factors, each hypothesis was investigated using several spectroscopic techniques. However, it was difficult to detect sufficient magnetite and manganese oxide on the surface of the black pottery to account for its black color. In contrast, a larger amount of carbon was located on the surface and core of the black pottery compared to the red pottery. These results indicate that the black factors can be credibly attributed to carbon rather than to magnetite or manganese oxide. The firing temperature of the black-burnished pottery was estimated from the mineral composition based on X-ray diffraction, and the firing atmosphere was deduced from the redox conditions based on the reduction index from Mössbauer spectroscopy. In addition, seven pieces of pottery excavated from Gunsu-ri Temple Site and Buyeo Ancient Tomb from the Sabi period of Baekje were investigated and compared the five pieces of pottery from the Hanseong period. Although the results were based on a limited number of potteries, various firing temperatures and redox atmosphere for pottery from the Hanseong and Sabi periods were carefully proposed.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference60 articles.
1. Kim M, Shin HN, Kim J, Roh KJ, Ryu A, Won H, et al. The ins and the outs: foodways, feasts, and social differentiation in the Baekje Kingdom, Korea. J Anthropol Archaeol. 2016;43:128–39. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2016.07.014.
2. Blackmore H, Cho D, Lee H-W. All for one? The production of black burnished pottery and state formation in the early Korean polity of Baekje. Archaeometry. 2021;63(3):531–48. https://doi.org/10.1111/arcm.12632.
3. Park S. The beginning and the end of Baekje capital. Jungang Gogo Yeongu. 2013;13:1–34.
4. Kim M. Leadership in the Emergent Baekje State: state formation in Central-Western Korea (ca. 200–400 CE). Open Archaeol. 2023;9(1):20220313. https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2022-0313.
5. Choi J. The development of the pottery technologies of the Korean peninsula and their relationship to neighboring regions. In: Byington ME, editor. Early Korea1. Cambridge: Korea Institute, Havard University; 2008. p. 157–98.