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Glassworking: Craft to Industry
Though glass was a common
enough material in the eastern Mediterranean from the early 2nd
century B.C, onwards, throughout the Republican era in the Roman
World, pottery was the material of choice for everything domestic,
from fish platters to fruit bowls, and no one seemed in any hurry
to change that situation. Then emperor Augustus entered our story.
Around 10 B.C., the direction of his economic policies suggest he
was uncomfortable with the degree to which Roman trade was controlled
by foreigners, and wanted the Italian mainland to be far more
self-sufficient. So local businesses for certain crafts (most obviously,
pottery- and cloth-making) were encouraged to expand. Meanwhile,
the craft of glassmaking was adopted with much energy and skill.
The Romans simply enslaved hundreds of
skilled craftsmen in the eastern provinces, uprooted them from their
homes and re-settled them in the outskirts of rapidly-growing Roman
cities. Pottery-makers were imported from Asia Minor and put to work at
Arretium in northern Italy; Greek craftsmen were moved from Athens to
cities in central Gaul. Glassworkers were brought from the provinces of
Syria, Judaea and Aegyptus and crowded into workshops in the commercial
suburbs of several Italian cities, including Rome itself.
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 Emperor Augustus Reigned, 27 B.C.-A.D. 14 |