RT Article T1 Pottery and Society in Iron Age Philistia: Feasting, Identity, Economy, and Gender JF Bulletin of ASOR IS 373 SP 167 OP 198 A1 Faust, Avi 1967- LA English PB The University of Chicago Press YR 2015 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1577295641 AB The Aegean-inspired pottery of Iron I Philistia has received a great deal of scholarly attention. Many have studied the various influences that shaped it, its development during the Iron I, the ethnic identity of its users, and even its disappearance at the beginning of the Iron II. While constantly changing during the first 150 years after the initial settlement of the new immigrants in Israel's southern coastal plain, this decorated pottery grew in popularity, and steadily increased its percentage in the ceramic assemblages of the Philistine centers. Later, in the early Iron II, this Aegean decorative tradition disappeared. The decorated pottery in Iron II Philistia (Ashdod Ware) was more akin to Phoenician decorative traditions, was applied to different vessel forms, and was far less popular than its predecessor. It is the aim of the present article to reevaluate the developments of the Aegean-inspired pottery during the Iron I and to reexamine the drastic transition from this decorated pottery to a local type of decorated ware in the Iron II, in order to learn about processes of development and change within the society of Philistia and about the relations between the Philistines and their neighbors, both within and without Philistia, at that time. K1 FASTS & feasts K1 Identity (Psychology) K1 Iron Age K1 Iron Age Philistia K1 Pottery : Research K1 Philistines K1 Sociology K1 Ethnicity K1 Feasting K1 Identity K1 Pottery K1 Social Change DO 10.5615/bullamerschoorie.373.0167