Selection of Roman Glass Iridescent Bottles

£ 450.00

An exquisite selection of Ancient Roman glass bottles, each featuring striking iridescence to the surface. Both vessels display a piriform shape of a wide lower body tapering upwards. A long cylindrical neck, constricted at the base, develops to a flat, everted rim. Each vessel rests upon a flat base with a very subtle pontil impression. Wear and weathering feature to the surface, alongside earthy encrustations, pinprick bubbles, and beautiful polychromatic iridescence.

PRICED INDIVIDUALLY

Date: Circa 1st Century AD
Provenance: Ex. Israeli Collection, 1990s.
Condition: Very fine. Earthy encrustations to the interior and exterior, minor wear and fabulous iridescence to the surface.

The invention of glass-blowing revolutionised the art of glass-making in the 1st century BC. The new technique allowed craftsmen to use smaller amounts of glass for each vessel and obtain much thinner walls, so enabling the creation of a variety of glass containers in new forms. Different minerals were added to create a variety of colours; the blue and green tints seen across these pieces would have been created by adding copper and changing the oxygen levels. Flasks such as this fine example would have stored cosmetics or drinking products, and were used by households and merchants across the Roman Empire.

The iridescence on ancient Roman glass was unintentional, and was caused by weathering on its surface. The extent to which a glass object weathers depends mainly on the burial conditions; however, the humidity, heat, and type of soil in which the glass was buried also all affect its preservation.

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

Weight N/A
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Culture

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Glass

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Reference: For a similar item,The British Museum, item 1856,0501.8

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