Excavations in 2001 and 2005 at Hammersmith Embankment in West London uncovered the remains of two glass furnaces with associated wasters relating to the manufacture of drawn glass beads during the second quarter of the 17th century. The site is significant as it represents the first archaeological evidence for the production of glass beads in post-medieval England. A preliminary study of the recovered material reveals the presence of 43 different bead varieties, many with stripes and multiple layers. While a number have not yet been observed elsewhere, a few have correlatives at a contemporary bead production site in Amsterdam, as well as aboriginal sites in northeastern North America. Comparisons of the chemical compositions of the Hammer...
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
This study aims to demonstrate the potential for understanding first millennium glass beads not as i...
Venice and Bohemia are generally considered to be the principal bead manufacturers of Europe. Yet Ge...
In 17th-century England, the village of Norton St Philip was well known as a center for the manufact...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
Excavations conducted at several sites in Antwerpen, a principal city and seaport on the Schelde Riv...
Dating from the 16th to 18th centuries, 63 glass artifacts (mostly beads) recovered from two sites i...
Glass Beads from Gloucester Point, Virginia, by Laurie E. Burgess and Christopher Sperling. • Borneo...
Four blue glass beads from the prehistoric site of Gardom’s Edge, in the upland area of the Peak Dis...
While countless tons of European glass beads flowed into West Africa over the centuries, there is st...
The site of a provisioning station operated by the Dutch East India Company near the Cape of Good Ho...
The Sullivans Island glass bead collection at the Smithsonian\u27s National Museum of Natural Histor...
Many thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and six...
Loaded with 200 tons of goods heading for Omaha, Nebraska, and Sioux City and Council Bluffs, Iowa, ...
Burials excavated on the north coast of Peru were associated with 16th-century European glass beads ...
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
This study aims to demonstrate the potential for understanding first millennium glass beads not as i...
Venice and Bohemia are generally considered to be the principal bead manufacturers of Europe. Yet Ge...
In 17th-century England, the village of Norton St Philip was well known as a center for the manufact...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
Excavations conducted at several sites in Antwerpen, a principal city and seaport on the Schelde Riv...
Dating from the 16th to 18th centuries, 63 glass artifacts (mostly beads) recovered from two sites i...
Glass Beads from Gloucester Point, Virginia, by Laurie E. Burgess and Christopher Sperling. • Borneo...
Four blue glass beads from the prehistoric site of Gardom’s Edge, in the upland area of the Peak Dis...
While countless tons of European glass beads flowed into West Africa over the centuries, there is st...
The site of a provisioning station operated by the Dutch East India Company near the Cape of Good Ho...
The Sullivans Island glass bead collection at the Smithsonian\u27s National Museum of Natural Histor...
Many thousands of glass beads have been excavated from Early British cemeteries of the fifth and six...
Loaded with 200 tons of goods heading for Omaha, Nebraska, and Sioux City and Council Bluffs, Iowa, ...
Burials excavated on the north coast of Peru were associated with 16th-century European glass beads ...
Coloured beads discovered at an Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Sewerby, Yorkshire. These images ...
This study aims to demonstrate the potential for understanding first millennium glass beads not as i...
Venice and Bohemia are generally considered to be the principal bead manufacturers of Europe. Yet Ge...