Come and dine with me... Early Roman luxury glass tableware from Berenike — new evidence from the harbor area and trash dumps

2017, 26, No. 2

University of Warsaw, Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology

University of Warsaw, Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, Centrum Archeologii Śródziemnomorskiej


Publication date

09.07.2018

Publishing model

open access

License type


Field

Humanities

Discipline

archeology

Language of publication

English

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Abstract

The harbor of Berenike on the Red Sea coast of Egypt was a major transit point in the long-distance trade of luxury commodities between the Roman Empire and the Indian Ocean Basin. The heyday of the commerce and the prosperity of the port lasted from the 1st to the mid-2nd century AD. A huge quantity of commodities passed through the port, imported not only for the purpose of exchange, but also for self-consumption. Glassware was among them. The high proportion of wares of high quality and exceptional esthetic value is quite extraordinary, even by modern standards. These wares highlight the position of Berenike in the trade, but they also showcase the city’s wealth and the great demand for luxury glass that existed there in the first centuries of the Roman Empire

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