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"Are we not frailer than glass?....For
even if glass is fragile, you find grandsons and great grandsons drinking
out of the cups of their grandfathers and great grandfathers...." (Saint
Augustine, Sermons 18.7) Among all the domestic glassware
that was produced in the Empire’s eastern provinces, this pitcher is exceptional
for its complexity if decoration and technical quality. Its body was created
by inflating a bulb of hot glass twice over, first inside a finely-ribbed
mold, then inside one with sharp ridges. The form of handle and mouth
are an imitation of a then fashionable shape in Roman silverware. (For the method of manufacture of this vessel, see
Reconstruction of the
Production Process.) |
![]() "Basket weave" wine pitcher |
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