In a preliminary report (Anatolian Studies, Vol. II, p. 14) we have already referred to the “Pergamene” pottery, which constituted by far the most distinctive ware both in the Hellenistic and the Roman levels at Sultantepe. This pottery was also found in large quantities at sites in North Syria and Cilicia such as Gözlü Kule at Tarsus, Dura Europos and Antioch-on-the-Orontes, and is discussed and analysed with particular thoroughness in the publication of the latter (Antioch, Vol. IV, Part I, pp. 18 ff.). We are now able to illustrate from Sultantepè examples of these wares, for which parallels can easily be found at the sites mentioned above. Such parallels are in fact indicated in the Catalogue of shapes in our Fig. 1. Features of the Hellenistic Pergamene which are more easily recognisable in photographs (Plate VII, 2) are, for instance, the rouletted or grooved circles on the floor of open dishes and the combination of the rouletted circle with imprinted leaves (cf. Antioch, Fig. 2). Fragments of Hellenistic “moulded bowls” in Pl. VII, 1 should also be compared to those from Tarsus (Tarsus, Figs. 9 ff.).