This book follows a continuous line of development from Canaanite
pottery to the Phoenician pottery corpus. Phoenician pottery typically
is considered to have first emerged in the Iron Age, and most research
is limited to the first half of the first millennium BCE. The current
analysis, however, shows the Canaanite predecessors as well as the
ongoing continuity of Phoenician forms and techniques during the
Hellenistic and Roman periods. There are two areas of focus, both of
which will be illustrated from materials drawn primarily from the
Levant. The first is Phoenician container products, especially amphorae
and bottles, although other coarse ware forms are included. The second
is red-slip pottery, which was a constant feature of the Phoenician
assemblage. These were mainly open vessels that did not contain other
products and were valued for their ritual attributes.