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Introduction
"Take cups made of Saguntan
clay which your servant may hold and keep without anxiety."
(Martial, Epigrams XIV.108)
"You will forgive me if I say I prefer glass: at least it
doesn't smell. If it were not so breakable I should prefer
it even to gold; as it is, it is so cheap." (Petronius,
Satyricon 50)
Clearly the manufacture of
amphorae was a major Roman industry, and one of a scale that
always would be swayed by the year-to-year state of wine production
throughout the Roman World. That will have been true also
wherever wooden casks (cupa) rather than pottery amphorae
were the preferred means of storage. But other craft industries
were effected by such matters as well. Someone had to make
the various kinds of bottles that stored wine and wine-based
sauces in the kitchen of every home, and all the beakers and
jugs that were used throughout the day in each city tavern,
and those brought out each evening during each family's evening
meal. Someone has to keep the quartermasters of frontier armies
supplied with such vessels as well. When the population of
the Empire approached 54 million during the reign of emperor
Trajan, around A.D. 116, potters and glassblowers combined
probably were producing as many as 100 million wine-related
vessels every year, just to keep pace with normal household
wear-and-tear and tipsied carelessness.
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REFERENCES
1) Fleming, S.J., 1999: Roman Glass:
Reflections on Cultural Change, 62-66 (Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Museum).
2) Goethert-Polaschek,
K., 1977: Katalog der Ramischen Gl‚ser des Rheinischen
Landesmuseums Trier, various entries (Mainz: Phillipp
von Zabern).
3) Greene,
K., 1978: "Roman Trade Between Britain and the Rhine Provinces:
The Evidence of Pottery to c. A.D. 250," in Roman Shipping
and Trade: Britain and the Rhine Provinces, 58-58 (edits.,
J. du Plat Taylor and H. Cleere; London: Council for British
Archaeology).
4) Moevs,
M.T.M., 1973: "The Roman Thin-Walled Pottery from Cosa," Memoirs
of the American Academy in Rome XXXIII, 49-58.
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