The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called 'vitreous materials', in particular the earliest glass. From its outset, this material appeared in an enormous variety of colours and colour combinations, the manufacture of which demanded a high degree of technological know-how. The unique properties of glass also rapidly came to the fore, most notably the potential of glass to be worked while hot. Archaeometric research into early Egyptian glass has tended to focus on chemical and isotopic analysis as a means to assign provenance to its raw ingredients. To this end, the use of a technique new to archaeology, ToF-SIMS, is developed here in order to investigate the origin of the colorant opa...
Glass in ancient Egypt appeared in the New Kingdom. It was a novel and highly prized material, which...
In recent years the study of glass in ancient Egypt has been a source of renewed interest and debate...
© 2017 University of Oxford This paper re-analyses a considerable corpus of glass from the Late Bron...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
This paper discusses historical development of glass in ancient times, identify the most important c...
Man-made glass was first regularly produced in Egypt and the Near East in the sixteenth century BC. ...
Egyptian faience is a hallmark of ancient Egypt culture and is probably known to everyone who has vi...
Egyptian faience is a hallmark of ancient Egypt culture and is probably known to everyone who has vi...
Known for its unique core-formed vessels and rich blue coloring, glassware dating from the reign of ...
AbstractResearch over the last few decades has greatly enhanced our understanding of the production ...
e-NewsletterToday glass is all around us, it is familiar to us all in windows, vessels, spectacles, ...
This paper is an attempt to understand the perception of colour of glass in the second mil- lennium...
S ome materials found in archaeological sites have chemi - cal or mineralogical characteristics whic...
Glass in ancient Egypt appeared in the New Kingdom. It was a novel and highly prized material, which...
Glass in ancient Egypt appeared in the New Kingdom. It was a novel and highly prized material, which...
In recent years the study of glass in ancient Egypt has been a source of renewed interest and debate...
© 2017 University of Oxford This paper re-analyses a considerable corpus of glass from the Late Bron...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
The Late Bronze Age in Western Asia and Egypt witnessed an explosion in the production of so-called ...
This paper discusses historical development of glass in ancient times, identify the most important c...
Man-made glass was first regularly produced in Egypt and the Near East in the sixteenth century BC. ...
Egyptian faience is a hallmark of ancient Egypt culture and is probably known to everyone who has vi...
Egyptian faience is a hallmark of ancient Egypt culture and is probably known to everyone who has vi...
Known for its unique core-formed vessels and rich blue coloring, glassware dating from the reign of ...
AbstractResearch over the last few decades has greatly enhanced our understanding of the production ...
e-NewsletterToday glass is all around us, it is familiar to us all in windows, vessels, spectacles, ...
This paper is an attempt to understand the perception of colour of glass in the second mil- lennium...
S ome materials found in archaeological sites have chemi - cal or mineralogical characteristics whic...
Glass in ancient Egypt appeared in the New Kingdom. It was a novel and highly prized material, which...
Glass in ancient Egypt appeared in the New Kingdom. It was a novel and highly prized material, which...
In recent years the study of glass in ancient Egypt has been a source of renewed interest and debate...
© 2017 University of Oxford This paper re-analyses a considerable corpus of glass from the Late Bron...