The
glass origin and evolution.
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Glass has been the subject of numerous documents written
by many authors from ancient times. The written work of the
Roman historian Gaius Plinius Secundus, called Pliny the Elder
(23 79 AD), in his book, Natural History,
is an example. He describes that around 5000 BC, Syrian merchants,
probably on their route to Egypt, made an overnight stop by
the River Belus in Phoenicia, propped a cooking pot on some
blocks of natron they were carrying as cargo, and made a fire
over which to cook a meal. Overnight the sand and the soda
were fused by the heat to produce a very brilliant and vitreous
product, similar to an artificial rock. This was, in synthesis,
the origin or glass.
Strabo (58 BC 25 AC), furthermore, on his book Geography,
describes with great wonder, a glass sarcophagus. He assures
that the appropriate sand for the production of glass was
extracted from a place located between Tolemaida and Tyro.
Herodotus (484 410 BC), a Greek writer from the 5th
century BC, wrote the first historical work in the conventional
sense of the term history. He is therefore known as the father
of history. He wrote about the way the Ethiopians embalmed
the deceased and laid them in glass sarcophagus. Eliano, Greek
writer from the 3rd century, describes the way that Xerxes,
Darius son, discovered the body of a Syrian leader in
a glass coffin. Solomon, in his Book of Proverbs
damns those who looked at wine through a crystal glass. Likewise,
glass is mentioned in the Old Testament in Jobs Story:
The gold and the crystal cannot equal it and the exchange
of it shall not be for jewels or fine gold. No mention shall
be made of coral, or of pearls for the price of wisdom is
above rubies.
All these occurrences happened way before the time when
glass started to be produced. Many of them come to us as verbal
stories transmitted from one generation to the next before
they were written. Later, all these versions were written
by the conquerors, fact that grants, to a certain extent,
a doubt to its veracity. Equally questionable is the XIX century
historic research about the ancient world, because in the
approach about the origins of the occidental culture, a certain
degree of romanticism rather than scientific bases prevails.
When an investigation related to ancient civilizations begins,
problems arouse because the sources of historic information
differ extremely on the quality of the information and facts
they provide. However, today we rely on better information,
sustained on the result of the information obtained by the
use of radiocarbon, dendrochronology, archeaomagnetism, databases,
documented investigation and field research done by archaeologists.
Natural History by Pliny the Elder, written on
the first century AC is the most outstanding among the historic
descriptions before mentioned. Therein we find an excellent
description of the geographical site where glass was discovered
and its accidental occurrence. Nevertheless, the details described
by Pliny are not very much reliable, because in order to obtain
the fusing point of natron resulting in the formation of glass,
it would have been necessary to achieve a temperature of 1300°
or 1500°C (2370° F.), whereas a campfire can reach
no more than 600° C (1100° F.).
Physical concerns arouse doubts, but there are certainly many
facts and indisputable information about the Phoenicians.
On one hand, they were the tradesmen for excellency of their
era, who, in lack of natural resources on their land, found
trade as their only way to survive. They even requested permission
from the Egyptians to freely buy and sell on their coastlines,
and later, carried the products of the Egyptian Kingdom to
all other seaports of the Mediterranean. They traded a large
quantity of different products, natron among them. The Phoenicians
did not only exchange merchandise on their trips, they also
spread science, knowledge and culture throughout the world
till then known.
This product was extremely valued since it was used to clean
their teeth and body. Furthermore, when it was dissolved in
water it worked as an agent to dissolve grease, thus, it was
used as soap for dishes. The Egyptians constantly used it
in the mummification process. The Phoenicians commercialized,
besides natron, objects of faience and glass, products probably
produced in Egypt. Craftsmen form the Kingdom were well known
throughout the Mediterranean, because they elaborated almost
perfect imitations of precious and semi precious gems using
those materials
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