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Title Glass of the Roman world / edited by Justine Bayley, Ian Freestone and Caroline Jackson
Published Oxford ; Havertown, PA : Oxbow Books, 2015
©2015

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Description 1 online resource (xxvi, 204 pages)
Contents 1. Primary glass workshops in Graeco-Roman Egypt: Preliminary report on the excavations of the site of Beni Salama, Wadi Natrun (2003, 2005-9) -- 2. The Hambach glass production in the late Roman period -- 3. A Gazetteer of glass working sites in Roman London -- 4. Provenance studies and Roman glass -- 5. The pontil in the Roman world: A preliminary survey -- 6. Composition, technology and production of coloured glasses from Roman mosaic vessels -- 7. Roman glass from East to West8. Mould-blownbeakers with figurative scenes: New data on Narbonensis province -- 9. Roman and later glass from the Fezzan -- 10. Some exceptional glass vessels from Caesarea Maritima -- 11. Glass in the domestic space: Contextual analysis of Late Roman glass assemblages from Ephesus and Petra -- 12. A Roman dionysiac cameo glass vase -- 13. An unusual mould-blownbeaker from Barzan, southwest France -- 14. Flat glass from Butrint and its surrounding areas, Albania -- 15. Two wooden glazing bars found in Vindonissa (Switzerland) from the collection of the Swiss National Museum -- 16. The re-useof Roman glass fragments -- 17. Roman enamels and enamelling -- 18. Beyond the Channel! That's quite a different matter. A comparison of Roman black glass from Britannia, Gallia Belgica and Germania Inferior
Summary "These 18 papers by renowned international scholars include studies of glass from Europe and the Near East. The authors write on a variety of topics where their work is at the forefront of new approaches to the subject. They both extend and consolidate aspects of our understanding of how glass was produced, traded and used throughout the Empire and the wider world drawing on chronology, typology, patterns of distribution, and other methodologies, including the incorporation of new scientific methods. Though focusing on a single material the papers are firmly based in its archaeological context in the wider economy of the Roman world, and consider glass as part of a complex material culture controlled by the expansion and contraction of the Empire"--Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on February 08, 2019)
Subject Glass -- Rome -- History
Glass manufacture -- Rome -- History
Glassware, Roman.
Glassware industry -- Rome -- History
Material culture -- Rome -- History
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Chemical & Biochemical.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Archaeology.
Antiquities
Commerce
Economic history
Glass
Glass manufacture
Glassware industry
Glassware, Roman
Manners and customs
Material culture
SUBJECT Rome -- Antiquities. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85115088
Rome -- Social life and customs
Rome -- Commerce -- History
Rome -- Economic conditions. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85115102
Subject Rome (Empire)
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Bayley, J. (Justine), editor.
Freestone, Ian, editor
Jackson, Caroline M., editor
LC no. 2015010792
ISBN 9781782977773
1782977775
9781782977759
1782977759