This is the standard table ware of the early-mid Hellenistic period in the northernmost Levant. Vessel fabric is a clean light pinkish brown; they are partially or mostly covered in a shiny slip, usually fired to orange-red, but it can be also be matte brown or red, semi lustrous or slightly metallic red, dark purple, or black.
It is most common in the region of coastal Cilicia, from Hama to Kinet Höyük/Issus to Tarsus (Jones 1950), in the third century BCE; its ubiquity here suggests this as a likely zone of origin. Potters in this region had access to a particularly excellent source of potting clay, which is classified on the LCP as Northern Levantine-Cypriot Ophiolitic.
Potters made both individual table vessels, such as saucers and small bowls, as well as serving vessels such as large fish plates with drooping rims. Shapes include bowls with incurved rims, saucers with ledge rims and fishplate depressions, vertical handled skyphoi, olpai, jugs and/or table amphoras with cupped or overhanging rims, and deep kraters with projecting rims.
Beginning in the late 3rd-early 2nd centuries BCE vessels start appearing at sites in the central and southern Levant, both along the coast (e.g., Beirut, 'Akko-Ptolemais) and in the interior (e.g., Kedesh). The spread at this time is may have been hastened by the Seleucid conquest of this region in 197 BCE (at the Battle of Paneion). The versions found at central and southern Levantine sites are usually slipped red, perhaps indicating that particular Cilician workshops exported their vessels or that merchants who traded vessels further to the south preferred red-slipped vessels.
Sandrine Elaigne has studied the material from the stratigraphic evidence from excavations in Beirut, and also analyzed some via INAA at Lyon, and determined that the clays are identical to those of ESA (Elaigne 2013, p. 217). She proposed to call the ware "Red-slip Predecessor."
Potters in this region used this same petro-fabric Northern Levantine-Cypriot Ophiolitic to make other fine wares. In the early 2nd c. BCE some potters here began making a very fine black-slip series; this ware has been given the name of Black-Slipped Predecessor (BSP), meaning the predecessor to ESA - because most of the BSP shapes are the same as the earliest shapes of ESA. Both Cilician Hellenistic Slipped Fine Ware (which carried a red slip) and BSP (which carried a black slip) continued to be made, side-by-side, for about two generations. Eventually both of these wares were replaced by ESA.