Abstract

The Bohemian historical glasses have been neglected and have not been in focus of Archaeometric studies so far. Potassium-calcium wood ash glasses, produced in Bohemia and Moravia, from the beginning of the 14th century to the first half of the 18th century, are chemically different from the glasses produced in the same period in Western Europe. There are no written sources for glass batch recipes for Gothic (14th–1st half of 16th c.) and Renaissance (16th–17th c.) glass, while there are only few for the Baroque (end of 17th–18th c.) glass recipes. Systematically investigating the chemical composition and typology of archaeological glasses, we have chosen to reconstruct the glass recipes of potassium-calcium glasses from the three periods. In this study, the glass recipes (the ratio of the raw materials) were calculated based on the chemical composition of the historical glasses studied by X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) and Scanning Electron Microscopy/Energy Dispersive System (SEM/EDS). The composition of the authentic natural raw materials was studied by XRF and X-Ray Diffraction (XRD): sand or quartz pebbles, beech ash and potash, limestone, NaCl, and As2O3. Model glasses confirmed our presumption of gradual development in the Bohemian glass batch recipes, which used very simple raw materials ratios.

Highlights

  • Bohemian glass has played a significant role in European glass production and trade since the beginning of its systematic manufacturing

  • This study helped to uncover some important aspects of Bohemian historical glassmaking, which is still an unexplored part of historical glassmaking

  • The potassium-calcium glasses produced in Bohemia and Moravia were different from similar types of glasses made in the rest of Western Europe and cannot be put into one category with those

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Summary

Introduction

Bohemian glass has played a significant role in European glass production and trade since the beginning of its systematic manufacturing. The knowledge about its production technology is important to the area of the current Czech Republic but it exceeds the borders to other parts of Central and Western Europe. There is not much knowledge about the technology of glass production in historical Bohemia to be found in current research. A few experiments aimed at the reconstruction of Bohemian glass technology were carried out in the past, focusing solely on Gothic glass [1,2,3,4]. One of them tried to use historically authentic raw materials [1]. This general lack of knowledge and experiments led us to this paper

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