Reused From Banquet to Grave: Gold Glass, a “Popular” Medium in Late Antiquity?

Keywords: Late Antiquity, Gold-Glass, Drinking Vessels, Funerary Practices, Reuse, “Popular” Culture

Abstract

Gold glass bottoms generally found in Roman catacombs, are some of late antiquity’s most enigmatic objects. Originally conceived as vessels, once they were broken, their bases were reemployed to be embedded in the mortar sealing of the slabs of certain loculi. Drawing on the different hypotheses on the origins of the bowls or glasses these bottoms were obtained from, and reflecting on the reasons for and ways of using these glass bottoms to decorate loculi, this paper aims to reassess the position of gold glass in the culture of late antiquity by questioning its pertinence or link to "popular" culture.

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Published
2022-03-01
How to Cite
Croci, Chiara. “Reused From Banquet to Grave: Gold Glass, a ‘Popular’ Medium in Late Antiquity?”. Eikón / Imago 11 (March 1, 2022): 47–55. https://doi.org/10.5209/eiko.78845.
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Monographic theme