Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic period

Summary: For most of the 1st millennium CE, glass was produced in a few industrial centers in the eastern Mediterranean and traded throughout the ancient world in the form of raw glass and finished objects. The chemical variability of glass is therefore limited, allowing economic and cultural exchan...

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Main Authors: Andrew Meek, St John Simpson, Nadine Schibille
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-02-01
Series:iScience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004225001051
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author Andrew Meek
St John Simpson
Nadine Schibille
author_facet Andrew Meek
St John Simpson
Nadine Schibille
author_sort Andrew Meek
collection DOAJ
description Summary: For most of the 1st millennium CE, glass was produced in a few industrial centers in the eastern Mediterranean and traded throughout the ancient world in the form of raw glass and finished objects. The chemical variability of glass is therefore limited, allowing economic and cultural exchange networks to be traced from production to consumer sites. This system of production and trade changed toward the end of the millennium. Using elemental analyses of glass from Merv (Turkmenistan), we reconstruct the transformation of the glass industry in the 9th century. Our data show that raw glass no longer traveled in large quantities over long distances, but that primary productions multiplied in urban centers along the medieval Silk Roads. We propose that the old model of a globalized glass trade disintegrates by the 9th century in favor of a more flexible and diverse production model, reflected in a variety of localized compositional groups.
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spelling doaj-art-9dad8f32c3cb4270a801f16c1a7d72682025-02-04T04:10:31ZengElsevieriScience2589-00422025-02-01282111845Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic periodAndrew Meek0St John Simpson1Nadine Schibille2Department of Scientific Research, The British Museum, London, UKDepartment of the Middle East, The British Museum, London, UKIRAMAT-CEB, UMR7065, CNRS / Université d’Orléans, Orléans, France; Corresponding authorSummary: For most of the 1st millennium CE, glass was produced in a few industrial centers in the eastern Mediterranean and traded throughout the ancient world in the form of raw glass and finished objects. The chemical variability of glass is therefore limited, allowing economic and cultural exchange networks to be traced from production to consumer sites. This system of production and trade changed toward the end of the millennium. Using elemental analyses of glass from Merv (Turkmenistan), we reconstruct the transformation of the glass industry in the 9th century. Our data show that raw glass no longer traveled in large quantities over long distances, but that primary productions multiplied in urban centers along the medieval Silk Roads. We propose that the old model of a globalized glass trade disintegrates by the 9th century in favor of a more flexible and diverse production model, reflected in a variety of localized compositional groups.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004225001051Analytical chemistrySpectroscopyArcheology
spellingShingle Andrew Meek
St John Simpson
Nadine Schibille
Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic period
iScience
Analytical chemistry
Spectroscopy
Archeology
title Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic period
title_full Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic period
title_fullStr Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic period
title_full_unstemmed Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic period
title_short Tracing glass production in urban centers along the Silk Roads in the early Islamic period
title_sort tracing glass production in urban centers along the silk roads in the early islamic period
topic Analytical chemistry
Spectroscopy
Archeology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004225001051
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