This paper presents the analysis of decoloured and naturally coloured glass from well-dated contexts in the southwest corner of the Roman fort at Oudenburg (Belgium) ranging from the late second to the early fifth century AD. The aim is three-fold. First, provide comparative material in the study of glass consumption from the northwestern provinces of the Roman Empire. Secondly, evaluate possible diachronic shifts in the applied decolourizing agent to produce colourless glass as to assess potential correlations between glass production recipes, provenance and chrono-typology. Finally, provide an added value to the research of glass recycling and mixing in the Roman imperial period. Nine subgroups are distinguished based on their chemical co...
Raw natron glass was traded throughout the Roman Empire as chunks, remelted, coloured and/or decolou...
Glass is one of the ancient human products most often traded for long distances from the place of ra...
In this multi-disciplinary study of Roman glass from Karanis, Egypt, I combine archaeological, chemi...
The present paper focuses on the archaeological, chemical and isotopic characterisation of glass fin...
Research on the cargo of glass in the Roman ship Iulia Felix, wrecked off the town of Grado (provinc...
The paper reports on the composition of thirty-eight Late Roman glass fragments (3rd–4th century CE)...
Glass is an extraordinary material that has been used for millennia, combining refinement with pract...
One hundred and ninety three glass fragments from the canabae in York were analysed (first to fourth...
A collection of 21 glass samples (18 colourless and 3 light aqua blue) found in recent excavations p...
The present work is focused on the study and comparison of glass-making processes of the Roman dark-...
This study is concerned with the compositional analysis of Roman and early post-Roman glass from bot...
The chemical composition of 42 samples of raw glass from the Komarov settlement on the Middle Dniest...
This study is concerned with the compositional analysis of Roman and early post-Roman glass from bot...
Compositional analysis has proved to be a powerful tool for investigating the recycling of transpare...
In the present study, the first archaeometric data on an ample selection of intentionally coloured (...
Raw natron glass was traded throughout the Roman Empire as chunks, remelted, coloured and/or decolou...
Glass is one of the ancient human products most often traded for long distances from the place of ra...
In this multi-disciplinary study of Roman glass from Karanis, Egypt, I combine archaeological, chemi...
The present paper focuses on the archaeological, chemical and isotopic characterisation of glass fin...
Research on the cargo of glass in the Roman ship Iulia Felix, wrecked off the town of Grado (provinc...
The paper reports on the composition of thirty-eight Late Roman glass fragments (3rd–4th century CE)...
Glass is an extraordinary material that has been used for millennia, combining refinement with pract...
One hundred and ninety three glass fragments from the canabae in York were analysed (first to fourth...
A collection of 21 glass samples (18 colourless and 3 light aqua blue) found in recent excavations p...
The present work is focused on the study and comparison of glass-making processes of the Roman dark-...
This study is concerned with the compositional analysis of Roman and early post-Roman glass from bot...
The chemical composition of 42 samples of raw glass from the Komarov settlement on the Middle Dniest...
This study is concerned with the compositional analysis of Roman and early post-Roman glass from bot...
Compositional analysis has proved to be a powerful tool for investigating the recycling of transpare...
In the present study, the first archaeometric data on an ample selection of intentionally coloured (...
Raw natron glass was traded throughout the Roman Empire as chunks, remelted, coloured and/or decolou...
Glass is one of the ancient human products most often traded for long distances from the place of ra...
In this multi-disciplinary study of Roman glass from Karanis, Egypt, I combine archaeological, chemi...