Verre byzantin et islamiqueByzantine and Islamic Glass
Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert
Poids en verre, fouilles de Fusṭāṭ (© IFAO)Glass weight, Fusṭāṭ excavations (© IFAO)
BORELL, Brigitte
Fragments of Coloured Glass with Applied Decoration Found in Singapore
Annales du 16e Congrès de l'Association Internationale pour l'Histoire du Verre (London 2003)
AIHV, Nottingham, 2003, p. 199-202
[1301, 1400]
• Islamic glass found in south-east Asia - archaeological evidence.
• Examines the commerce on the Red Sea during the Mamluk Period.
• Fragments of boxes for storing small items that would protect them from the moisture of sea transport (?).
– Box: translucent dark blue or purple glass with some additions of clear glass to form the rim; decoration of applied threads of opaque glass (white, yellow, red or purple). Manufactured in the Middle East or somewhere along the routes of the Indian Ocean trade.
• Examines the commerce on the Red Sea during the Mamluk Period.
• Fragments of boxes for storing small items that would protect them from the moisture of sea transport (?).
– Box: translucent dark blue or purple glass with some additions of clear glass to form the rim; decoration of applied threads of opaque glass (white, yellow, red or purple). Manufactured in the Middle East or somewhere along the routes of the Indian Ocean trade.
| Singapore Singapore | Fort Canning Hill | consommation |
Version 5, données dudata date 30 janvier 2013January 30th 2013