Ancient Roman Green Glass Perfume Bottle

£ 700.00

A stunning, miniature ancient Roman bottle, blown from emerald-coloured glass. The vessel features thick walls and a bell-shaped body that sits on a carinated bottom with a small circular base. A short neck leads to a small mouth with an everted rim. A thin wheel-cut groove encircles the top and the bottom of the body. The glass is covered with a vivid, multi-coloured iridescence.

SKU: RGS-97
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Date: Circa 1st century AD
Provenance: Ex Mayfair, London, UK, gallery, 1990s-2000s. From an important collection of glass, the property of a London gentleman.
Condition: Excellent condition. A beautiful iridescence to the surface.

As in the modern day, glassware in antiquity was considered an art form, with the best pieces were valued higher than wares made from precious metals. Glass bottles, such as this interesting example, were used as containers for ointments, powders, balms, and other expensive toiletry liquids, especially perfumes: the glass was preferred for holding liquids, due to its non-porous, non-absorbent nature. Glass vessels are found frequently at Hellenistic and Roman sites, especially in cemeteries, and the liquids that filled them would have been gathered from all corners of the expansive Roman Empire. Thanks to the invention of glass blowing it became possible to create moulds in order to mass produce popular designs.

To learn more about Roman glass, visit our relevant post: How It Was Made: Roman Glass.

Weight 19.25 g
Dimensions W 2.2 x H 3.7 cm
Glass

Blown Glass

Region

Southern Europe

Reference: For similar: The Metropolitan Museum, New York, item 81.10.265

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