Difference between revisions of "Cobalt glass"
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− | [[File:61.1219-SC157116.jpg|thumb|]] | + | [[File:61.1219-SC157116.jpg|thumb|Case glass goblet<br>MFA# 61.1219]] |
== Description == | == Description == | ||
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vidrio cobalto (Esp.); verre au cobalt (Fr.); cobalt glas (Ned.); vidro de cobalto (Port.); metz glass; blue glass | vidrio cobalto (Esp.); verre au cobalt (Fr.); cobalt glas (Ned.); vidro de cobalto (Port.); metz glass; blue glass | ||
− | [[File:1978.730-SC41823.jpg|thumb|]] | + | [[File:1978.730-SC41823.jpg|thumb|Whale oil lamp<br>MFA# 1978.730]] |
− | == | + | == Resources and Citations == |
− | J. Ogden, ''Jewelry of the Ancient World'', Rizzoli International Publications, New York, 1982. | + | * J. Ogden, ''Jewelry of the Ancient World'', Rizzoli International Publications, New York, 1982. |
[[Category:Materials database]] | [[Category:Materials database]] |
Latest revision as of 15:19, 25 August 2020
Description
A vivid blue Glass that contains Cobalt oxide as a colorant. Cobalt glass was manufactured as early as the 2nd millennium BCE (Odgen 1982). The most likely sources of cobalt oxide were the ores from the Caucasus region and Iran. Cobalt glass manufactured in Egypt and Mycenae contains traces of zinc that is not found in the cobalt glass from Mesopotamia region (Odgen 1982).
Synonyms and Related Terms
vidrio cobalto (Esp.); verre au cobalt (Fr.); cobalt glas (Ned.); vidro de cobalto (Port.); metz glass; blue glass
Resources and Citations
- J. Ogden, Jewelry of the Ancient World, Rizzoli International Publications, New York, 1982.