From trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period Britain

<p>The main aim of this thesis is twofold; first to asses the ability of material studies to identify and quantify recycling in ancient glass, and then to compare the nature and extent of recycling of glass in the first to fourth centuries in Britain, Roman Britain, to the following Early Medi...

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Main Author: Sainsbury, V
Other Authors: Morrison, W
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
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author Sainsbury, V
author2 Morrison, W
author_facet Morrison, W
Sainsbury, V
author_sort Sainsbury, V
collection OXFORD
description <p>The main aim of this thesis is twofold; first to asses the ability of material studies to identify and quantify recycling in ancient glass, and then to compare the nature and extent of recycling of glass in the first to fourth centuries in Britain, Roman Britain, to the following Early Medieval period, fifth to eighth centuries.</p> <p>The first section of this thesis, the backbone, is a compilation of published values of glass analysed from English sites, and a comparative database from Europe. This also includes the expansion of the English database with the fresh analysis of glass from the sites of Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, and Lyminge, Kent.</p> <p>The next section is a theoretical discussion of recycling and particularly the re- cycling of ancient glass. This includes both the ramifications of different forms of recycling for artefacts, in terms of traditional archaeological concerns such as trade, deposition and object biography, but more importantly the material studies changes that one might expect to witness from such recycling.</p> <p>This leads on to the chemistry of glass, and specifically how this can be used to demonstrate that recycling. Setting out and devising the material studies approaches to quantifying and qualifying ancient glass recycling, assessing which techniques are potentially of value. This synthesis and analysis includes both a large amount of legacy data, the database, as well as the small study of new glasses. In particular, the new glasses that will aim to increase the number of post-Roman glasses.</p> <p>The final portion of the thesis uses the architecture of the previous sections to compare the patterns of recycling across time in Britain, specifically the geographical components. This demonstrates the relationship between geography and trade, and how this changes in England as Roman influence falls and a new power takes Britain.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:1153d50e-9833-4a3b-b0be-005d778da8b62024-12-01T13:38:14ZFrom trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period BritainThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:1153d50e-9833-4a3b-b0be-005d778da8b6ArchaeologyEnglishHyrax Deposit2019Sainsbury, VMorrison, WPollard, M<p>The main aim of this thesis is twofold; first to asses the ability of material studies to identify and quantify recycling in ancient glass, and then to compare the nature and extent of recycling of glass in the first to fourth centuries in Britain, Roman Britain, to the following Early Medieval period, fifth to eighth centuries.</p> <p>The first section of this thesis, the backbone, is a compilation of published values of glass analysed from English sites, and a comparative database from Europe. This also includes the expansion of the English database with the fresh analysis of glass from the sites of Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, and Lyminge, Kent.</p> <p>The next section is a theoretical discussion of recycling and particularly the re- cycling of ancient glass. This includes both the ramifications of different forms of recycling for artefacts, in terms of traditional archaeological concerns such as trade, deposition and object biography, but more importantly the material studies changes that one might expect to witness from such recycling.</p> <p>This leads on to the chemistry of glass, and specifically how this can be used to demonstrate that recycling. Setting out and devising the material studies approaches to quantifying and qualifying ancient glass recycling, assessing which techniques are potentially of value. This synthesis and analysis includes both a large amount of legacy data, the database, as well as the small study of new glasses. In particular, the new glasses that will aim to increase the number of post-Roman glasses.</p> <p>The final portion of the thesis uses the architecture of the previous sections to compare the patterns of recycling across time in Britain, specifically the geographical components. This demonstrates the relationship between geography and trade, and how this changes in England as Roman influence falls and a new power takes Britain.</p>
spellingShingle Archaeology
Sainsbury, V
From trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period Britain
title From trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period Britain
title_full From trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period Britain
title_fullStr From trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period Britain
title_full_unstemmed From trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period Britain
title_short From trash to treasure: the recycling of glass in Roman and Early Medieval period Britain
title_sort from trash to treasure the recycling of glass in roman and early medieval period britain
topic Archaeology
work_keys_str_mv AT sainsburyv fromtrashtotreasuretherecyclingofglassinromanandearlymedievalperiodbritain