Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. Vol. 1 © 2014 Materials Research Society
DOI: 10.1557/opl.2014.710
TECHNOLOGY OF EGYPTIAN CORE GLASS VESSELS
Blythe McCarthy
1
, Pamela Vandiver
2
, Alexander Nagel
1
, Laure Dussubieux
3
1
Freer|Sackler, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C.
2
Materials Science and Engineering, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ
3
Anthropology, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL
ABSTRACT
Our knowledge of glass production in ancient Egypt has been well augmented not only by the
publication of recently excavated materials and glass workshops, but also by more recent
materials analysis, and experiments of modern glass-makers attempting to reconstruct the
production process of thin-walled core-formed glass vessels. The small but well preserved glass
collection of the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. was used to examine and study the
technology and production of ancient Egyptian core-formed glass vessels. Previous study
suggests that most of these vessels were produced in the 18th Dynasty in the 15th and 14th
centuries BCE, while others date from the Hellenistic period and later. In an ongoing project we
conducted computed radiography, x-ray fluorescence analysis and scanning electron microscopy
on a selected group of vessels to understand further aspects of the ancient production process.
This paper will provide an overview of our recent research.
INTRODUCTION
Ancient Egyptian core-formed glass vessels have a layer of glass that was formed around
a porous or porely sintered sandy clay core. Several methods have been proposed for forming
these vessels including the application of threads of glass to a rotating heated core then
marvering and heating, dipping the core into molten glass, and rolling a preheated core in
powdered glass followed by marvering and heating steps.
Recent experiments of modern glass-makers have attempted to reconstruct the production
process of thin-walled core-formed glass vessels [1,2,3]. Our knowledge of the production
process has also been furthered by excavations of glass-workshops of the 2nd millennium BCE
at Amarna, Lisht, Malkata and Gurob [4,5,6] and by the large number of excavated samples of
core-formed vessels discovered since the nineteenth century [7]. Due to information from these
studies, the use of powdered glass applied to a core is currently favored as the most likely
production method [8,1].
While our knowledge about the process, beginning with the mounting of a prefabricated
core and continuing through to the final glass product, has much improved through these
excavations and experiments, further results may be achieved by analysis of the core-formed
glass itself. In cases where subsequent working and annealing steps have not obliterated the
evidence, the different forming methods should result in different patterns of inclusions, porosity
and compositional variation. If the vessel is formed by wrapping threads around a core, porosity
should be elongated and/or aligned in the direction of winding. Compositional variation would
be expected to occur from thread to thread and also aligned with the threads. In the case where
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