Pot 1: Ceramic fragment (c. 5,000 BCE), presumed to be a shard from a pot used for preserving food, one of the oldest surviving evidences of Neolithic Græntfjaller pots
Pot 2: This pot dates from about 500 BCE. Græntfjaller ceramics remained comparatively crude in comparison with older world cultures, partly because of the lack of suitable clay-based soils
Pot 3: This pot (c. 1000 CE) carries a tin-based glaze, evidence that medieval Græntfjallers had established trading links as tin mining was not widely practiced in the country at the time
Pot 4: This pot (c. 1200 CE) carries some of the last examples of Græntfjaller runes, prior to a shift to a wider adoption of a Latin writing system
Pot 5: The cross on this pot (c. 1500 CE) shows that Christianity had begun to establish itself firmly in Græntfjall by this time in the wake of Sankt Jakob the Badass's defeat of the Turks at the Field of Cabbages
Pot 6: This elegant (if to modern tastes rather rococco) pot (c. 1550) is made of fine porcelain, further testament to Græntfjall's substantial trading empire
Pot 7: This pot (c. 1700) is decorated with bands of gold, and was discovered nearly perfectly in tact in the wreck of a Græntfjaller corsair grave, the trading empire having given over to piracy and privateering by this time
Pot 8: This crude pot (c. 1920) was used as an ashtray during meetings of the Græntfjaller Communist Party, whose sudden and violent rise to power its rough edges rather predict
Pot 9: A decorative vase depicting the restoration of the monarchy (c. 2000); kitsch items like this were popular collectibles in the wake of the fall of communism
Pot 10: This pot (c. 2015) in the shape of a Klein Bottle is one of the first items to have been 3-D printed in Græntfjall, marking the technological and economic boom of the 21st century