Fantuzzi, LeandroBernal Casasola, DaríoCau Ontiveros, Miguel ÁngelBustamante Álvarez, Macarena2025-01-212025-01-212024-10-151612-1651https://hdl.handle.net/2445/217770A study of a 2nd century AD assemblage of handmade/slow wheel-made cooking wares, found at the Roman settlement of Tamuda (Tetouan, Morocco) is presented. Such ceramics are rare in Early-Middle Roman Imperial contexts of the western Mediterranean. A combined typological and archaeometric approach ―including petrographic, mineralogical, and chemical analyses― was carried out to study this assemblage, aiming to examine the hypothesis of a local or regional provenance and to shed light on its production technology. The results indicate the existence of a diversity of products, including a fabric that was likely locally manufactured, as well as other imported fabrics that point to micro-regional distribution or trade of some of these wares. This research is a significant contribution towards a better understanding of the handmade/slow wheel-made pottery that was produced and consumed in the northern Moroccan Rif in the Roman period.40 p.application/pdfeng(c) Brill, 2024Ceràmica romanaMauritània TingitanaArqueologia clàssicaUtensilis de pedraMarrocRoman potteryMauretania TingitanaClassical antiquitiesStone implementsMoroccoA Unique Assemblage of Roman Handmade/Slow Wheel-Made Pottery at Tamuda (Tetouan, Morocco): Provenance, Production Technology, and Archaeological Implicationsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article7509292025-01-21info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess