Long-overlooked clues hiding within ancient Roman glasswork may have uncovered a secret collective of artisans. Itâs all thanks to archaeologist and glassblower Hallie Meredith, who was once gazing at Roman objects called glass cage cups or diatreta at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. She happened to turn one around, setting off a series of discoveries. âBecause I am trained as a maker, I kept wanting to flip things over,â Meredith said in a statement. âWhen that happens, patterns appear that everyone else has literally photographed out of the frame.âMeredith noticed motifs including crosses, leaves, and diamonds next to an inscription âwishing [the cupâs] owner a long life.â Such symbols had previously been labeled as decorative, but she saw something more. This chance observation blossomed into a glass treasure huntâshe found similar symbols on other diatreta dated between the fourth and sixth centuries, works that have intrigued scholars for centuries.Read more: âThe Strange Life of Glassâ ADVERTISEMENT Nautilus Members enjoy an ad-free experience. Log in or Join now . It was already known that artisans began with large chunks of thick glass, which they carved into two layers connected by intricate glass bridges. Now, Meredithâs detective work suggests that these glassworkers used the symbols found on these cups to form a visual language, findings reported in an April Journal of Glass Studies paper and a World Archaeology paper published last month.âIt is clear that such symbols were not merely âdecorativeâ but were instead meaningful and intentional in a way not previously recognized or appreciated,â she wrote in the Journal of Glass Studies paper.After inspecting unfinished fragments of diatreta, tool marks, and inscriptions, Meredith suggests that collectives of apprentices, polishers, and engravers collaborated on these magnificent piecesâpainstaking projects that could take years to complete. These motifs may have referred to the regional wor...
First seen: 2025-11-21 15:08
Last seen: 2025-11-21 18:09