Roman Glass Inkwell

An ancient Roman green glass inkwell, thickly blown, with piriform base and a with a wide lip.

Ca. 1st - 3rd century AD.
Height: 3 5/8 in. (9.5 cm).

Ancient glass manufacture had begun in the 2nd millennium BC in Mesopotamia and Egypt. The Greeks and Phoenicians advanced glass technology greatly in the latter 1st millennium BC. In the early 1st century AD, Roman workshops began producing blown glass on a large scale. Eventually glass vessels came to replace a wide variety of pottery and metal wares in the ancient world. Ancient Roman glass was traded far beyond the Roman empire. Roman glass vessels have been found in Scandinavia, India, and in Han Dynasty tombs in China.

Cf. Whitehouse, D., Roman Glass in the Corning Museum of Glass, vol.1, New York, 1997, item 268, for type.
Formerly in an English private collection.
Inv#: 9696
Guaranteed Authentic

$2,500

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