Ceramic building material
Appearance
Ceramic building material, often abbreviated to CBM, is an umbrella term used in archaeology to cover all building materials made from baked clay. It is particularly, but not exclusively, used in relation to Roman building materials.
It is a useful and necessary term because, especially when initially found in archaeological excavation, it may be difficult to distinguish, for example, fragments of bricks from fragments of roofing or flooring tiles. However, ceramic building materials are usually readily distinguishable from fragments of ceramic pottery by their rougher finish.
See also
- Adobe
- Antefix
- Architectural terracotta
- Brick
- Brickwork
- Clay
- Cob (material)
- Imbrex and tegula (Roman roofing tiles)
- Mudbrick
- Palmette
- Pilae stacks
- Roman brick
- Tile
Further reading
- Brodribb, Gerald (1987). Roman Brick and Tile. Stroud: Alan Sutton. ISBN 0-86299-363-6.
- Warry, P. (2006). Tegulae: Manufacture, Typology and Use in Roman Britain. Oxford: Archaeopress.