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d’archéologie orientale - Le Caire

Verre byzantin et islamiqueByzantine and Islamic Glass

Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert

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YOUSUF, Abd el-Ra’uf Ali
Syro-Egyptian Glass, Pottery and Wooden Vessels
WARD, Rachel
Gilded and Enamelled Glass from the Middle East
British Museum Press, London, 1998, p. 20-23
British Museum (LondresLondon) ; Coptic Museum (Le CaireCairo) ; Freer Gallery of Art (Washington) ; Museum of Islamic Art (Le CaireCairo) ; Toledo Museum of Art (Toledo-Ohio) ; Royal Ontario Museum of Archaeology (Toronto) ; Walters Art Gallery (Baltimore)

[1101, 1400]
• Similarites of the motifs and shapes beetwen pottery, wood and glass vessels.
• Examples of glass vesseles:
– so-called “Palmer Cup”: design of a seated ruler with his attendants (fig. 13.5) - Ayyubid Period;
– christian motifs on enamelled and gilded glass vessels of the Ayyubid Period: a beaker with representation of the “Entry into Jerusalem” (fig. 15.8);
– human figures on a dropper (fig. 6.5), inscription with the name of al-Bābā Badr al-Dīn Muḥammad, governor of Qūṣ (Egypt) - first half of the 14th century;
– bottle decorated with the name and blazon of Amir Shams al-Dīn Altanbughā (fig. 6.6) - 1260-1293;
– bowl with an animal frieze (fig. 6.8).
Egypte Egypt production consommation
Syrie Syria production consommation

Version 5, données dudata date 30 janvier 2013January 30th 2013