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Electron microprobe analysis of 9th-12th century Islamic glass from Cordoba, Spain

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-05-26, 11:20 authored by C. N. Duckworth, R. Cordoba, E. W. Faber, D. J. Govantes-Edwards, J. Henderson
Twenty-six samples from domestic assemblages of 9th–12th century Córdoba were subjected to electron microprobe analysis. The results reveal two main compositional types. The first, encountered in 13 of the samples, seems to result from the combination of plant ashes with high-impurity sand, and has some contemporary parallels from Syria and Egypt. The second type is a lead–soda–silica glass, encountered in a relatively high proportion of the glasses (11 of the 26 sampled), possibly formed by the addition of lead metal to existing glasses and with very few known parallels. These are among a very small number of results available to date on the chemical composition of glasses from medieval Spain, and the presence of a high proportion of lead–soda–silica glasses is particularly interesting, possibly indicating a technological practice unique to, or originating in, the western Muslim world.

Funding

The research presented has been conducted as part of the al-Andalus Glass Project, which is funded by the Association for the History of Glass (AHG) and Fundación Málaga. The work undertaken by Ricardo Córdoba was done so as part of the project El Conocimiento Científico y Técnico en la Península Ibérica (Siglos XIII–XVI): producción, difusión y aplicaciones.

History

Citation

Archaeometry Volume 57, Issue 1, pages 27–50, February 2015

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF ARTS, HUMANITIES AND LAW/School of Archaeology and Ancient History

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Archaeometry Volume 57

Publisher

Wiley for University of Oxford, Research Laboratory for Archaeology and the History of Art

issn

0003-813X

eissn

1475-4754

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2016-01-27

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/arcm.12079/abstract;jsessionid=53B8CBD872F9E2D72A8FB88627286859.f03t03

Language

en

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