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A selection of 50 red stoneware objects, polished, unpolished, partially polished or glazed, from different collections (Département du Patrimoine et des Collections de la Cité de la Céramique, Sèvres, France; Art Institute of Chicago; a private collection), attributed to 18th century Böttger, 20th century Meissen (Saxony) and Chinese productions have been analyzed with a portable X‐ray fluorescence spectrometer in museum/collector rooms. The comparison of major (Si, Al), minor (K,Ca,Fe), and trace (Ti, Mn, Zr, Rb, Sr) element ratios was made to assist with the classification of the different artifacts as a function of their production technology and raw materials. The results are discussed in light of historical reports on the characteristics of Böttger production and criteria of identification are proposed to distinguish between “classical” Böttger (early 18th century) and other productions.

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This page is a summary of: On-Site Identification of Early BÖTTGER Red Stoneware Made at Meissen Using Portable XRF: 1, Body Analysis, Journal of the American Ceramic Society, June 2014, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/jace.13032.
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