Roman Glass Ribbed Bowl

£ 3,200.00

An ancient Roman bowl made out of aqua coloured glass. The vessel, created through a mould, features a slightly out splayed rim with a fire-rounded edge, the shallow sides curving in towards the slightly concave bottom. The shallow body is decorated with thirty tapering ribs, evenly distributed across the entire vessel. Beautiful translucent iridescence has developed on the item’s surface, with large areas of encrustation, typical of age.

Date: Circa 1st Century AD
Condition: Excellent. Large areas of silvery iridescence and encrustation.

The Romans loved glass for its practical as well as decorative uses. Glass flasks, such as this beautiful example, were used as containers for ointments, powders, balms, and other expensive liquids associated with the toilet, especially perfumes: the small mouth of the bottle is ideal for slow, careful pouring, while 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.

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

Weight 248 g
Dimensions W 15.5 x H 4 cm
Glass

Moulded Glass

Region

Southern Europe

Reference: For a similar item, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, item 81.10.39

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