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Neighbours And Successors Of Rome Traditions Of Glass Production And Use In Europe And The Middle East In The Later 1st Millennium Ad Daniel Keller

  • SKU: BELL-5756768
Neighbours And Successors Of Rome Traditions Of Glass Production And Use In Europe And The Middle East In The Later 1st Millennium Ad Daniel Keller
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Neighbours And Successors Of Rome Traditions Of Glass Production And Use In Europe And The Middle East In The Later 1st Millennium Ad Daniel Keller instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxbow Books
File Extension: PDF
File size: 87.23 MB
Pages: 352
Author: Daniel Keller, Jennifer Price, Caroline Jackson
ISBN: 9781782973973, 1782973974
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

Neighbours And Successors Of Rome Traditions Of Glass Production And Use In Europe And The Middle East In The Later 1st Millennium Ad Daniel Keller by Daniel Keller, Jennifer Price, Caroline Jackson 9781782973973, 1782973974 instant download after payment.

Presented through 20 case studies covering Europe and the Near East, Neighbours and Successors of Rome investigates development in the production of glass and the mechanisms of the wider glass economy as part of a wider material culture in Europe and the Near East around the later first millennium AD. Though highlighting and solidifying chronology, patterns of distribution, and typology, the primary aims of the collection are to present a new methodology that emphasises regional workshops, scientific data, and the wider trade culture.
This methodology embraces a shift in conceptual approach to the study of glass by explaining typological change through the existence of a thriving supra-national commercial network that responded to market demands and combines the results of a range of new scientific techniques into a framework that stresses co-dependence and similarities between the various sites considered. Such an approach, particularly within Byzantine and Early Islamic glass production, is a pioneering concept that contextualises individual sites within the wider region.
By twinning a critique of archaeometric methods with the latest archaeological research, the contributors present a foundation for glass research, seen through the lens of consumption demands and geographical necessity, that analyses production centres and traditional typological knowledge. In so doing the they bridge an important divide by demonstrating the co-habitability of diverse approaches and disciplines, linking, for example, the production of Campanulate bowls from Gallaecia with the burgeoning international late antique style. Equally, the particular details of those pieces allow us to identify a regional style as well as local production. As such this compilation provides a highly valuable resource for archaeologists, anthropologists, and art historians.

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