
Period: | | |
Dating: | | 280 AD320 AD |
Origin: | | Roman World, Eastern Roman World, Roman Syria |
Material: | | Glass (all types) |
Physical: | | 9.2cm. (3.6 in.) - 60 g. (2.1 oz.) |
Catalog: | | GLS.SS.00730 |
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Links to others of type Sprinkler flask
Glass sprinkler flask, Syria, 280-320 AD
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Ribbed pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Ribbed pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
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Ribbed pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Ribbed pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Ribbed pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Ribbed pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Spiral pattern-blown sprinkler flask, Syria
Sprinkler glass flask, Syria, 280-320 AD
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This sprinkler was blown from pale green glass. Below a slightly slanted wide infolded rim, the neck exhibits an unusually sharp constriction where the top piece meets the body piece. The lower part of the neck widens into a flattened spherical body with an almost completely horizontal shoulder. The bottom is flat, with a faint trace of pontil mark. Despite the opacity of the deposits, the immediate perception is that of lightness and transparency. Syria, Eastern Roman Empire, late third to early fourth century AD.
Flaky white weathering crust.
Glass Sprinklers
Sprinkers are bottles made with a constriction in the neck resembling a washer. This constriction regulates the flow of contents to a trickle, which is helpful with products that must be dispensed parcimoniously. The level of care in the decoration of sprinkers suggests that their contents were luxury items such as expensive fragrances.
[Sprinklers were] Made and widely used in Syria, Eastern Palestine, and Mesopotamia
The earliest sprinklers on record are those from Dura Europos in north Syria which date from before 256 when the city was abandoned
Production continued throughout the fourth century and perhaps into the fifth century. It has not been established when the sprinkler became obsolete. Syrian glassworkers made a large variety of vessels into sprinklers, simply by squeezing the neck with jacks and bushing the body up against the cut-in to create the diaphragm. Jars, tubes, amphorisks, and head-shaped flasks were occasionally finished as sprinklers (Stern 2001:152).
Bibliography (for this item)
Stern, E. Marianne
2001 Roman, Byzantine, and Early Medieval Glass; 10 BCE-700 CE; Ernesto Wolf Collection. Hatje Cantz Publishers, Ostfildern-Ruit, Germany.
Bibliography (on Glass Sprinklers)
Stern, E. Marianne
2001 Roman, Byzantine, and Early Medieval Glass; 10 BCE-700 CE; Ernesto Wolf Collection. Hatje Cantz Publishers, Ostfildern-Ruit, Germany. (152)
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