Roman Translucent Glass Flask with Blue Trailing

£ 1,600.00

A fine Roman glass flask featuring a globular body which tapers to a short cylindrical neck and a flaring mouth. The base is slightly concave and displays a pontil mark. The vessel is enriched with vibrant, pale blue trailing applied across the body including a zig-zag pattern set in between two horizontal bands. Three blue, protruding knobs have also been added to the base. The interior of the flask is covered in encrustation and there is some iridescence to the surface.

Date: Circa 3rd-4th century AD
Provenance: Ex SM collection, London, acquired 1970s-2000s.
Condition: Very fine condition, minor pinhole to the body by the trailing.

In stock

SKU: LD-731 Category: Tags: ,

Glass was often the preferred material for storing expensive oils, perfumes, and medicines because it was not porous. The small neck and mouth allowed the user to carefully pour and control the amount of liquid dispensed. By the 1st century AD, the technique of glass blowing had revolutionised the art of glass making, allowing for the production of small medicine, incense, and perfume containers in new forms. These small glass bottles are found frequently at Hellenistic and Roman sites, especially in cemeteries, and the liquids, which filled them, would have been gathered from all corners of the expansive Roman Empire. Most likely they were used as personal scent bottles, carrying expensive perfumes. Different minerals were added to create a variety of colours; the colourless glass seen in this piece would have been created by adding iron III oxide and the blue trailing would have been made by adding copper to the glass..

 

To find out more about Roman glass please see our relevant blog post: Ancient Glass and Collecting Roman Glass.

Weight 29.3 g
Dimensions W 4.9 x H 6.4 cm
Culture

Glass

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Region

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