Ancient Roman Pale Green Glass Sprinkler Flask

£ 850.00

An extremely fine Ancient Roman sprinkler flask blown from pale green glass with a decorated body. The seam mark down the side indicates that the body was blown into a two-part mould creating a complex pattern in relief. The rounded base is decorated with a cross-hatched circle. Framing the circle is a wide register of a petal-shaped pattern which rises up the lower section of the body. Across the centre is a horizontal band of diagonal lines. The upper shoulders of the flask are decorated with a more abstract curvilinear pattern. The short cylindrical neck ends with a wide, outsplayed, funnel-shaped mouth. The neck and rim must have been free-blown and added separately and therefore do not display a mould seam. The surface of the glass is covered with silver- and pink-toned iridescence.

Height of the flask without stand: 7.8cm

Date: 3rd–4th century AD
Condition: Very good condition. The flask is whole and intact. There is earthly encrustation to the surface and inside the vessel. A small yellow-coloured inclusion is visible on the band of diagonal lines. An air bubble can be seen to the right hand side of the inclusion. Supplied with a custom-made stand.
Product Code: RGS-81
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Flasks like this were designed with a constriction on the inside of the neck. This permitted only a drop of liquid to pass through at a time, hence the term ‘sprinkler’ or ‘dropper’ flask. Glass was often the preferred material for storing expensive oils, perfumes, and medicines because it was not porous. The small body and mouth allowed the user carefully to pour and control the amount of liquid dispensed. By the 1st century AD, the technique of glass-blowing had revolutionised the art of glass-making, allowing for the production of small medicine, incense, and perfume containers in new forms. These small glass bottles are found frequently at Hellenistic and Roman sites, especially in cemeteries, and the liquids which filled them would have been gathered from all corners of the expansive Roman Empire.

The iridescence on ancient Roman glass was unintentional, and was caused by weathering on its surface. The extent to which a glass object weathers depends mainly on the burial conditions; however, the humidity, heat, and type of soil in which the glass was buried also all affect its preservation.

Weight 118.8 g
Dimensions L 6.1 x W 6.3 x H 9.6 cm
Glass

Blown Glass, Moulded Glass

Region

Southern Europe

Reference: For a similar vessel: The Getty Museum, 71.AF.82

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