- In
different periods of time and in
different countries, the term
majolica has been used for two
distinct types of pottery. Firstly, from the mid-15th...
-
Victorian majolica properly refers to two
types of
majolica made in the
second half of the 19th
century in
Europe and America. Firstly, and best known...
-
French name for ****za, in the
Romagna near Ravenna, Italy,
where a
painted majolica ware on a clean,
opaque pure-white ground, was
produced for
export as early...
- and in
Spain as talavera. In English, the
spelling was
anglicised to
majolica(/maɪˈɒlɪkə/). The name is
thought to come from the
medieval Italian word...
-
Fielding majolica is
pottery made at the
Railway Pottery in
Stoke on
Trent under the
proprietorship of
Simon Fielding (1827–1906) and
Abraham Fielding...
- miles)
southeast of Bologna. ****za is home to a
historical manufacture of
majolica-ware
glazed earthenware pottery,
known from the
French name of the town...
-
regularly during the 1880s. They
specialised in the
manufacturing of
Victorian majolica and earthenware. In 1900, the
company emplo**** over 700
people in the Staffordshire...
- Wienzeile, has a
facade covered with
majolica, or
glazed earthenware tiles in
floral designs, is po****rly
known as the
Majolica House. The second, at 38 Linke...
-
Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. The
Mexican pottery is a type of
majolica (faience) or tin-glazed earthenware, with a
white base
glaze typical of...
- mid-16th century,
apparently made for the
French court and the life-size
majolica pea****s by
Mintons in the 1860s. In the 18th century,
especially in English...