Four-lobed dish with floral design

White ceramics splashed with green such as this dish recovered from the Tang Shipwreck were produced in Chinese kilns. Several colours could be used for this technique, but green examples appealed specially to the Islamic Middle East. Similar wares have been found throughout the Abbasid Empire, for example, at Samarra, Siraf, and Nishapur. The inscribed floral design on this dish may also have been added to cater to Middle Eastern tastes. Chinese green-splashed wares were widely imitated in the Middle East, but artists there created their own distinct variations, often adding inscriptions. Most Chinese green-splashed wares were made in the Gongxian kilns in Henan province. They may have been developed as an alternative product because the Gongxian white wares could not match the quality of white ceramics made by other kilns. The Tang Shipwreck was a 9th century vessel that was en route from China back to the Middle East when it sank off the coast of Belitung Island in the Java Sea.