First identified as an autonomous ceramic tradition more than 40 years ago on the basis of the results obtained by the preliminary survey of northwest Arabia, conducted by the University of London and by the Arabah Expedition, the Qurayyah Painted Ware (QPW; originally called ‘Midianite’ pottery) has been, since then, strictly associated with the Hejaz region (known in Biblical and later sources as Midian) in general and with the site of Qurayyah in particular. A date to the 13th–12th centuries BCE was established on the basis of the associated material form the Egyptian sanctuary at Timna (Site 200). Since then, the corpus of QPW has been steadily growing. Even if the eponymous site of Qurayyah from which the majority of the currently known material stems has not been systematically excavated yet, the mass of newly available data deriving from surveys, archaeological excavations and scientific analyses of the sherds allows a fresh look at the characteristics, distribution patterns and chronological framework of this pottery group.
Keywords: Qurayyah Painted Ware, QPW, ‘Midianite’ pottery, northern Hejaz, northern Arabia, Late Bronze Age, early Iron Age, Arabah, Timna, Faynan, Qurayyah, Tayma