Yazar
Unknown
Basım Tarihi
900
Basım Yeri
Egypt (made) Iran (made) -
Konu
Islam Africa
Tür
Diğer
Dil
Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital
Evet
Yazma
Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar
Height: 14.3cm, Maximum diameter: 7.8cm
Kütüphane
Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası
C.29-1932
Kayıt Numarası
C.29-1932
Lokasyon
Middle East Section
Tarih
900
Notlar
This cut-glass bottle has a high, curved foot, a globular body and a tall, flaring neck. It is made from transparent glass with a green tinge. The glass worker has decorated the body with four wheel-cut drop motifs and cut a double moulding into the shoulder. The neck has faceted sides and a collar around the rim. Glass workers made bottles of this type in the Middle East in the 9th to 11th centuries, and they may have been made in both Egypt and Iran. The discovery of a similar piece in an 11th-century shipwreck found near the Turkish coast has provided new evidence. It suggests that such pieces were more likely to have been made somewhere in the East Mediterranean coastlands. Experts therefore think that this jug was probably made in Egypt in the Fatimid period (969-1171).
Tarihsel bağlam
Necks of comparable bottles cut on the wheel with similar decorative motifs have been found in Persia, datable from the second half of the ninth to the early tenth century, and in Egypt, datable to the ninth to eleventh centuries. a very similar bottle has been found among the eleventh-century glass of the shipwreck of Serçce Limani.
Malzemeler ve teknikler
Wheelcut glass
Fiziksel açıklama
This cut glass bottle, made from transparent glass with a green tinge, has a high, curved foot, a globular body and a tall, flaring neck. The body is decorated with four wheel-cut drop motifs; a double moulding has been cut into the shoulder; and the neck has faceted sides and a collar around the rim.
Üslup
Fatimid