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The Maitum anthropomorphic burial jars are earthenware secondary burial vessels discovered in 1991 by the ... these secondary burial jars date back to the Metal Age ...
3.4 Maitum jar burials, South Cotabato. 3.5 Panhutongan, Surigao del Norte. ... The site is of metal age, 200 BCE – 200 CE. Maitum jar burials, South Cotabato
Maitum, officially the Municipality of Maitum ... these secondary burial jars date back to the Metal Age. Two conventional dates were 1830 +/-60 B.P. [calibrated date ...
Typologically the designs from Maitum are characteristic of the Metal Age Period in the Philippines ca. 500 BC – AD 500. According to Dizon (1996: xi) in terms of design the earthenware assemblage is similar to those found in the archaeological sites of Kalanay in Masbate in Central Visayas and Tabon Cave in Palawan.
'Metal period' c. 2500 to 1500 bp [9] or Metal Age (500 BCE - AD 960 or 500 BCE - 500 AD). [2] Pre-colonial period, there was a more centralized production of pottery in certain areas. An example of one of those sites is Tanjay in the Negros Island, which existed from AD 500 - 1600, however it extents a little into the colonial period as well. [2]
Maitum Anthropomorphic Pottery (190 BC to 500 AD)– In 1991, the National Museum archaeological team discovered anthropomorphic secondary burial jars in Ayub Cave, Barangay Pinol, Maitum, Sarangani Province, Mindanao, Philippines, dating them to be from between 190 BC and 500 AD. The jars are commonly known today as Maitum jars.
The Manunggul Jar is a secondary burial jar excavated from a Neolithic burial site in the Manunggul cave of the Tabon Caves at Lipuun Point in Palawan, Philippines.It dates from 890–710 B.C. [2] and the two prominent figures at the top handle of its cover represent the journey of the soul to the afterlife.
Limestone burial urn from Cotabato, Philippines, dated approximately 600 CE. Jar burial is a human burial custom where the corpse is placed into a large earthenware container and then interred.