Materials (Jan 2022)

Shedding Light on Roman Glass Consumption on the Western Coast of the Black Sea

  • Roxana Bugoi,
  • Alexandra Ţârlea,
  • Veronika Szilágyi,
  • Ildikó Harsányi,
  • Laurenţiu Cliante,
  • Irina Achim,
  • Zsolt Kasztovszky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15020403
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 403

Abstract

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The chemical composition of 48 glass finds from Histria and Tomis, Romania, chiefly dated to the 1st–4th c. AD, was determined using prompt gamma activation analysis (PGAA) at the Budapest Neutron Centre (BNC). Most fragments have composition typical for the Roman naturally colored blue-green-yellow (RNCBGY) glass; Mn-colorless, Sb-colorless, and Sb–Mn colorless glass finds were evidenced, too. Several Foy Série 2.1 and Foy Série 3.2 glass fragments, as well as an HIMT and a plant ash glass sample, were identified in the studied assemblage. The archaeological evidence, the glass working waste items, and the samples with compositional patterns suggestive of recycling are proofs of the secondary glass working activities at Tomis during the Early Roman Empire period.

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