Egyptian faience and glass

Bibliographic Information

Egyptian faience and glass

Paul T. Nicholson

(Shire Egyptology, 18)

Shire, 1993

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 75-76) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Egyptian faience is a hallmark of ancient Egypt culture and is probably known to everyone who has visited the Egyptian gallery of a museum. This book examines the technology of making this vitreous material and outlines its long history, which stretches from early Predynastic times to the end of the pharonic Egypt and beyond. The range of uses found for faience is examined and some of the reasons for its popularity discussed. The author then examines the related technology of glass making and working. Glass has a much shorter history, flourishing only in the New Kingdom before declining again, not to find popularity until much later times. Although glass was relatively rare, Egyptian glass makers were able to produce many masterpieces, and the making and development of these forms are described, along with the archaeological evidence for sites where glass or faience were made.

Table of Contents

  • Part I: Faience: The material
  • Predynastic
  • Early Dynastic, Old Kingdom and First Intermediate Period
  • Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period
  • New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period
  • The Late Period and after.
  • Part II: Glass: The material and its technology
  • The earliest glass in Egypt
  • The New Kingdom
  • The Third Intermediate and Late Periods
  • The Graeco-Roman Period.
  • Glossary
  • Further reading
  • Museums

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