5th century BCE
Acquired by Henry W. Haynes, c. 1873-1878. Bequest of Henry W. Haynes to the Department of the Classics, 1912. Transfer from the Department of the Classics, 1977.
Lead-glazed funerary ware: brick-red earthenware with degraded lead-fluxed emerald green glaze
1st-3rd century CEChineseWhite ware: porcelain with light bluish glaze. Probably made in Yŏju, Kyŏnggi province.
17th centuryKoreanLacquer on wood
19th-20th centuryJapaneseMonochrome lead-glazed ware: white earthenware with lead-fluxed cobalt-blue glaze on the exterior and lead-fluxed pale yellow glaze on the interior. Probably from kilns at Luoyang or Gongxian, Henan province.
8th centuryChinesePlaster
Gray earthenware with incised decor
ChineseStoneware
20th centurySwedishFritware painted with blue (cobalt), turquoise (copper), and black (chromium) under clear alkali glaze
14th centuryInlaid celadon ware: light gray stoneware with celadon glaze over decoration inlaid in black and white slips. Reportedly recovered from a tomb on Kangwha Island, Kyŏnggi province.
13th centuryKoreanReddish earthenware covered in whitish slip and painted in red (iron), black (manganese and iron), and green (chromium) under clear lead glaze
10th-11th centuryTerracotta
9th-8th century BCEGreekSilver
18th centuryIrish