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The
Discovery Of Glass
Natural glass has existed
since the beginnings of time, formed when certain
types of rocks melt as a result of high-temperature
phenomena such as volcanic eruptions, lightning
strikes or the impact of meteorites, and then cool
and solidify rapidly.
According to the ancient-Roman historian Pliny (AD
23-79), Phoenician merchants transporting stone
actually discovered glass in the region of Syria
around 5000 BC.
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A
Craft Is Born
The earliest man-made glass objects, mainly non-transparent
glass beads, are thought to date back to around
3500 BC, with finds in Egypt and Eastern Mesopotamia.
In the third millennium, in central Mesopotamia,
the basic raw materials of glass were being used
principally to produce glazes on pots and vases.
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Early
Hollow Glass Production
After
1500 BC, Egyptian craftsmen are known to have begun
developing a method for producing glass pots by
dipping a core mould of compacted sand into molten
glass and then turning the mould so that molten
glass adhered to it. While still soft, the glass-covered
mould could then be rolled on a slab of stone in
order to smooth or decorate it.
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Starting
To Blow
A major breakthrough in glassmaking was the discovery
of glassblowing some time between 27 BC and AD 14,
attributed to Syrian craftsmen from the Sidon-Babylon
area. The long thin metal tube used in the blowing
process has changed very little since then. |
The
Roman connection
The Romans also did much to
spread glassmaking technology. With its conquests,
trade relations, road building, and effective political
and economical
administration, the Roman Empire created the conditions
for the flourishing of glassworks across western
Europe and the Mediterranean. During the reign of
the emperor Augustus, glass objects began to appear
throughout Italy, in France, Germany and Switzerland.
Roman glass has even been found as far as China,
shipped there along the silk routes.
It was the Romans who began to use glass for architectural
purposes, with the discovery of clear glass (through
the introduction of manganese oxide) in Alexandria
around AD 100.
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Sheet
glass skills
The 11th century also saw the development by German
glass craftsmen of a technique - then further developed
by Venetian craftsmen in the 13th century - for
the production of glass sheets. By blowing a hollow
glass sphere and swinging it vertically, gravity
would pull the glass into a cylindrical "pod"
measuring as much as 3 metres long, with a width
of up to 45 cm. |
Next
Edition:
The evolution of “Flat Glass Technology”
1900-1925. |
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Copyright
© 2007 Goodluck glass Private Limited. All rights
reserved. |
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