white ware bowl (left), not tin-glazed, found in
Iran, and Iraqi tin-glazed earthenware bowl (right) found in
Iraq, both 9–10th century, an example of
Chinese influences on Islamic pottery.
British Museum. Tin-glazed pottery of different periods and styles is known by different names. The pottery from Muslim Spain is known as
Hispano-Moresque ware. The decorated tin-glaze of Renaissance Italy is called
maiolica, sometimes pronounced and spelt
majolica by English speakers and authors. When the technique was taken up in the Netherlands, it became known as
delftware as much of it was made in the town of
Delft. Dutch potters brought it to England in around 1600, and wares produced there are known as
English delftware or
galleyware. In France it was known as
faience. The word
maiolica is thought to have come from the medieval Italian word for
Majorca, an island on the route for ships that brought Hispano-Moresque wares to Italy from
Valencia in the 15th and 16th centuries, or from the Spanish
obra de Mallequa, the term for lustered ware made in Valencia under the influence of Moorish craftsmen from Malaga. During the Renaissance, the term
maiolica was adopted for Italian-made
luster pottery copying Spanish examples, and, during the 16th century, its meaning shifted to include all tin-glazed earthenware. Because of their identical names, there has been some confusion between tin-glazed majolica/maiolica and the lead-glazed majolica made in England and America in the 19th century, but they are different in origin, technique, style and history. In the late 18th century, old Italian tin-glazed maiolica became popular among the British, who referred to it by the anglicized pronunciation
majolica. The
Minton pottery copied it and applied the term
majolica ware to their product. At the Great Exhibition of 1851, Minton launched the colorful
lead-glazed earthenware which they called
Palissy ware, soon also to become known as
majolica. So now there were two distinct products with the same name. "In the 1870s, the curators of the
South Kensington Museum returned to the original Italian 'maiolica' with an 'i' to describe all Italian tin-glazed earthenware, doubtless to stress the Italian pronunciation and to avoid confusion with contemporary majolica." A style of brightly coloured 19th-century
lead-glazed earthenware was also called "majolica", and is now known as
Victorian majolica W.B. Honey (Keeper of Ceramics at the
Victoria & Albert Museum, 1938–1950) wrote of
maiolica that, "By a convenient extension and limitation the name may be applied to all tin-glazed ware, of whatever nationality, made in the Italian tradition … the name faïence (or the synonymous English 'delftware') being reserved for the later wares of the 17th Century onwards, either in original styles (as in the case of the French) or, more frequently, in the Dutch-Chinese (Delft) tradition." The term
maiolica is sometimes applied to modern tin-glazed ware made by studio potters. ==Hispano-Moresque ware==