III. The legacy of Pliska
6. Materials and workshops
The Pliska plain and its immediate surroundings offer three main building
materials – clay, wood and stone. A significant part of the vessels used
in the dwellings were produced from local clays. One of the pottery workshops
was situated at the banks of the river Assar-dere, where kilns from the
Xth c. have been found. They represent round chambers, isolated
by the fireplace by a grate whose openings let the hot air throught. Ten
kilns of a different construction in object No 31 were probably intented
for firing up of glazed vessels. So far we do not know where the local
bricks and roof-tiles had been produced. Wood has probably been supplied
from the neighbouring wooded plateaus and it has been mainly used in the
construction of the dwellings, the semi-dugouts, throughtout the existence
of Pliska. The stone quarries have not been studied yet. Several types
of the stones had been used in the early buildings. The harder types were
probably quarried from the banks of the river Kamenitsa to the south-east
of Pliska, where there are signs of old stone-pits. The soft marl stones
came from underground rocks. The marble, in the form of columns, bases
and capitals, represented predominantly re-used antique materials and probably
only the column from Vezir tepe was made out of local material. Imported
were also the columns of the palace cross-like domed type church, hewn
out of the green marble brecca. A slab of this type of marble contains
one of the so called Proto-Bulgarian inscriptions. This type of marble
whose main quarries were situated in Thessaly, was probably delivered from
Byzantium.
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Pottery kiln at site No 31
SVaklinov, p. 192 |
Crucibles for melting of non-ferous metals from Pliska
SStanilov, p. 94 |
Stone mould for casting items of metal
SVaklinov, p. 192 |
The rest of raw-materials were imported from various places. There are
data of smelting of non-ferous metals, including gold, in the area of mound
XXXIV. Clay smelting utensils and clay nozzles have been found. At the
banks of the river there is a spot with a thick layer of charcoals, ashes
and fired-up coal – IXth c. metallurgical waste. The mound itself
is partly built of such waste. A stone mould for decorations and for belt
decorations, found in the Palace centre, also speaks about the smelting
of non-ferous metals. A whole series of not large, of single-use furnaces
for smelting iron were found along the inner face of the fortress wall.
At the same place, under a lightly-built wooden shelter there were nine
furnaces for melting glass. The iron and the glass furnaces date to the
beginning of the X c. at the earliest. At the end of the X c. – the first
half of the XI c. the former palatial square was turned into a place of
production. The production was connected with a chemical substance whose
composition has not been investigated, which was brought in special fire-resistant
and extremely hard vessels (sphero-cones). Fragments of thick-walled pots,
which had acquired bluish colour due to the very high temperature of the
liquid poured into them, were discovered near one cross-like stone furnace.
Rectangular brick cameras with one narrowed end formed as a stove (? flue,
V.K.), found at various places in the Outer and the Inner town, are also
connected with production activities. The published examples are relatively
late, from the X-XI c., but there are data that such constructions existed
during the pagan period as well. A lightly-built workshop for producing
copper utensils has been found near the northern gate.
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