Abstract:
© 2015, Edizioni Nuova Cultura. All rights reserved. The article represents the experience of complex research and conservation of an outstanding specimen of medieval Islamic fine wares - Iranian 12<sup>th</sup> century bowl found in archaeological excavations in Biliar, a capital of Volga Bulgaris in the 11<sup>th</sup> - beginning of the 13<sup>th</sup> centuries. Main methods of investigation are morphological, technological and semantic analyses. Chemical composition of ceramic body and glaze was determined by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). The bowl is shaped by pressing into a mold with added foot-ring. 14 lobes of the bowl are decorated with 14 differing feminine faces in headdresses (crowns?), 13 of which are adorned with paired confronted birds: doves, falcons, partridges, ducks, geese, and swans. The walls of the bowl are pierced along the edges of the faces, with tiny holes filled with transparent glaze, so the walls are translucent against the light. The bowl is coated with glaze all over except the foot-ring and adorned by underglaze splashes of cobalt. The bowl was previously treated in the field, where it was assembled of 22 fragments, and we had to deal with its full retreatment. Conservation approach was developed individually on the basis of characteristics of body and glaze, peculiarities of manufacture, damages and deterioration of ceramic and restoration materials. The whole conservation process is represented in the article. The process of edges cleaning was the most time-and effort demanding one, while desalination and loss compensation turned out to be most difficult in terms of taking correct conservation decisions. As a result of full re-treatment, the item was thoroughly investigated, its body released off excessive chloride salts and consolidated. The bowl got aesthetical appearance worth both its historical value and artistic merits and can be successfully presented on the exposition of renowned university museum on the rights of the "pearl" of its collection.