|
|
||
Ancient Glass–History |
||
|
December 26th, 2008 by Just Glass Online Like it? Share it:
The people of the ancient world very likely discovered ways to make glass accidentally while firing what is called Faience, which is a kind of pottery that is glazed with a sodium compound. If the glaze mixed with the clay prior to firing, the result would be a glassy substanced created in the clays body. ![]() glass2 Making glass had its origins in the Palestinian area, and was further developed in Egyptian areas around 1500 BC. Glass was not plentiful as it is today. It was used in much the same way and was thought of in the same way that semi precious stones were and in fact, held the same status as they did, being nearly as rare. Glass vessels made in ancient times were created using molds, and the earliest example of this molded type glass was found in a tomb, that of Thutmose’s three foreign wives, which offered up a glass vessel that had been molded as well as many beads and two more unusual type vessels also made of glass. This leads to the speculation that glasmaking probably came to Egypt during Thutmose III reign. The glass made in ancient times was, or so its said, made from sand quartz. Other chemicals were added to lower the melting point, so in effect, the ancients were using some very complex chemistry to both creat the glass, as well as to color it. The impurities that were contained in ancient glass are what gave it its color, with maganese adding the pinks and violets, while sulfurs gave them the greens and yellows and various types of things such as azurite, added on purpose after a time, created lovely deep blues. Glassblowing itself didn’t really take place until about 50 Bc, reportedly near Palestine, which is believed since the first blown glass we found was found near Jerusalem. |
||
| Related Articles | ||
|
|
||
| Comments | ||






yellow depression glass federal pattern…
I must have somehow missed it! Guess I should do some other research before coming to a conclusion….
Trackback by Jack — January 28, 2009 @ 11:07 am