
11th–12th century
Khmer ware Stoneware with molded decor under brown glaze
A brown glazed stoneware jar is molded in the shape of an elephant with decorative elements. The elephant's head is on the right side of the jar, and it has a conical lid on top. By the early 1000s, much of Thailand had been consolidated under Khmer rule (802–1437 CE). A highway linking the Khorat Plateau—site of Ban Chiang ceramic production, an example of which is in the case at far left—to Angkor (in present-day Cambodia) increased regional trade and the distribution of distinctive chocolate-glazed ceramics in animal forms. This regally attired elephant resembles those used in Khmer royal processions. Such a ceramic container likely stored lime, an ingredient used in the preparation of betel, a mild stimulant popular throughout Southeast Asia. Gallery G213 Gift of funds from Clifford and Suzanne Roberts a
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