Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T00:14:46.090Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Glass-making and the Sixth Legion at York

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2011

H.E.M. Cool
Affiliation:
Nottingham (H.E.M.C), Dept. of Archaeology and Prehistory, University of Sheffield (C.M.J.), Castel, Guernsey (J. M.)
C.M. Jackson
Affiliation:
Nottingham (H.E.M.C), Dept. of Archaeology and Prehistory, University of Sheffield (C.M.J.), Castel, Guernsey (J. M.)
Jason Monaghan
Affiliation:
Nottingham (H.E.M.C), Dept. of Archaeology and Prehistory, University of Sheffield (C.M.J.), Castel, Guernsey (J. M.)

Extract

It has long been accepted that the Roman soldier was as likely to be engaged in craft or building activities as he was in specifically military ones such as fighting or drill practice. Vegetius listed the specialists that could be expected in a legion. They included builders of various types, people who could make vehicles, armourers, and weaponsmiths. The soldiers in auxiliary units also needed similar skills as the lists dating to the beginning of the second century at Vindolanda make clear. These gave details of the numbers of men engaged in different activities, and noted builders, shoemakers, and men working at some type of kiln or furnace. The archaeological evidence shows that the range of craftsmen was a large one. Potting industries were set up when the local potters did not provide the suite of vessels the soldiers required. Metalsmiths turned their hands to enamelled vessels as well as utilitarian items with a more obviously military function such as harness-fittings and studs. This paper will explore another possible facet of military craftsmanship, that of the manufacture and working of glass which is suggested by the recovery of glass-melting pots and partially reacted glass batch material at 16–22 Coppergate, York.

Type
Articles
Information
Britannia , Volume 30 , November 1999 , pp. 147 - 162
Copyright
Copyright © H.E.M. Cool, C.M. Jackson, Jason Monaghan 1999. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Anon. 1996: ‘Glass in the new Roman gallery, Museum of London’, Glass News 1, 4Google Scholar
Bateman, N.C.W. 1997: ‘The London amphitheatre: excavations 1987-1996’, Britannia 28, 5185Google Scholar
Baumgartner, E., and Krueger, I. 1988: Phonix aus SandundAsche. Glas des Mettelalters, MunichGoogle Scholar
Bayley, J. 1988: ‘Viking glassworking: the evidence from York’, Annales de 10eCongrès de l'Association Internationale pour l'Histoire du Verre, Amsterdam, 245–54Google Scholar
Bayley, J. 1991: Analytical Results for Metal and Glass-working Crucibles from Frere's Excavations at Verulamium, Herts, Ancient Monuments Laboratory Report 68/91Google Scholar
Bayley, J. 1992: Anglo-Scandinavian Non-ferrous Metalworking from 16–22 Coppergate, The Archaeology of York 17/7, LondonGoogle Scholar
Bayley, J., and Budd, P. 1998: ‘The clay moulds’, in Cool, H.E.M. and Philo, C. (eds), Excavations of Roman Castleford: 1974-85. Volume 1: The Small Finds, Yorkshire Archaeology 4, Wakefield, 195222Google Scholar
Biek, L., and Bayley, J. 1979: ‘Glass and other vitreous materials’, World Archaeology 11.1, 125Google Scholar
Bishop, M.C. 1985: ‘The military fabrica and the production of arms in the early principate’, in Bishop, M.C. (ed.), The Production and Distribution of Roman Military Equipment: Proceedings of the Second Roman Military Equipment Research Seminar, BAR Int. Ser. 275, Oxford, 141CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boon, G.C. 1966: ‘Roman window glass from Wales’, Journal of Glass Studies 8, 41–5Google Scholar
Boon, G.C. 1974: Silchester the Roman Town ofCalleva, Newton Abbot and LondonGoogle Scholar
Bowman, A.K., and Thomas, J.D. 1994: The Vindolanda Writing Tablets (Tabulae Vindolandenses II), LondonGoogle Scholar
Brill, R.H. 1967: ‘A great glass slab from ancient Galilee’, Archaeology 20, 8895Google Scholar
Bryson, B. 1996: Notes from a Small Island, LondonGoogle Scholar
Charlesworth, D. 1959: ‘The glass’, in C.M. Daniels, ‘The Roman bath-house at Red House, Beaufront nr. Corbridge’, Archaeologia Aeliana4 37, 85176Google Scholar
Charlesworth, D. 1979: ‘Glass (including material from all other Exeter sites excavated between 1971 and 1976)’, in Bidwell, P.T., The Legionary Bath-house and Basilica and Forum at Exeter, Exeter Archaeological Report 1, Torquay, 223–31Google Scholar
Cool, H.E.M., and Price, J. 1995: Roman Vessel Glass from Excavations in Colchester, 1971-85, Colchester Archaeological Report 8, ColchesterGoogle Scholar
Cool, H.E.M. forthcoming: ‘Craft and industry in Roman York’, in Wilson, P. and Price, J. (eds), Aspects of Roman Industry in Yorkshire and Northern EnglandGoogle Scholar
Esmonde Cleary, A.S., and Ferris, I.M. 1996: Excavations at the New Cemetery, Rocester, Staffordshire, 1985-1987, Trans. Staffordshire Archaeol. and Historical Society 35, StaffordGoogle Scholar
Foy, D., and Sennequier, G. 1989: À trovers le verre du moyen âge à la renaissance, Nancy-MaxévilleGoogle Scholar
Frere, S.S. 1984: Verulamium Excavations Volume III, Oxford University Committee for Archaeology Monograph 1, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Frere, S.S. 1987: Britannia (3rd edn), LondonGoogle Scholar
Greene, K. 1977: ‘Legionary pottery and the significance of Holt’, in Dore, J. and Greene, K. (eds), Roman Pottery Studies in Britain and Beyond, BAR Int. Ser. S30, Oxford, 113–32Google Scholar
Hall, R.A. 1984: The Viking Dig, LondonGoogle Scholar
Hall, R.A. 1992: ‘Archaeological introduction’, in Bayley 1992, 737–45Google Scholar
Hall, R.A. 1997: Excavations in the Praetentura: 9 Blake Street, The Archaeology of York 3/4, YorkGoogle Scholar
Hanson, W., and Maxwell, G. 1983: Rome's North-West Frontier, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Henderson, J. 1985: ‘The raw materials of glass manufacture’, Oxford Journal of Archaeology 4(3), 267–91Google Scholar
Isings, C. 1980: ‘Glass from the Canabae Legionis at Nijmegen’, Ber Rijksdienst oudheidkund Bodenmerz 30, 281346Google Scholar
Jackson, C.M., Wager, E.C.W., Joyner, L., Day, P.M., and Kilikoglou, V. forthcoming: ‘A glassmaking site at Coppergate, York: analytical evidence for the nature of production’, Journal of Archaeological ScienceGoogle Scholar
Jackson, R.P.J., and Potter, T.W. 1996: Excavations at Stonea Cambridgeshire 1980–85, LondonGoogle Scholar
Kenward, H.K., and Hall, A.R. 1995: Biological Evidence from Anglo-Scandinavian Deposits at 16–22 Coppergate, The Archaeology of York 14/7, YorkGoogle Scholar
Monaghan, J. 1997: Roman Pottery from York, The Archaeology of York 16/8, YorkGoogle Scholar
Morel, J., Amrein, H., Meylan, M.-F., and Chevalley, C. 1992: ‘Un atelier de verrier du milieu du ler siècle apr. J.-C. à Avenches’, Archdologie der Schweiz 15, 217Google Scholar
Ottaway, P. 1993: English Heritage Book of Roman York, LondonGoogle Scholar
Ottaway, P. 1996: Excavations and Observations on the Defences and Adjacent Sites 1971–90, The Archaeology of York 3/3, YorkGoogle Scholar
Ottaway, P.J., and Cool, H.E.M. 1995: Early York: Development and Change, unpublished project design and assessment presented to English HeritageGoogle Scholar
Perrin, J.R. 1977: ‘“Legionary” ware in York’, in Dore, J. and Greene, K. (eds), Roman Pottery Studies in Britain and Beyond, BAR Int. Ser. S30, Oxford, 101–12Google Scholar
Perrin, J.R. 1981: Roman Pottery from the Colonia: Skeldergate and Bishophill, The Archaeology of York 16/2, LondonGoogle Scholar
Price, J. 1985: ‘The Roman glass’, in Pitts, L.F. and Joseph, J.K. St, Inchtuthil the Roman Legionary Fortress, Britannia Monograph 6, London, 303–12Google Scholar
Price, J., and Cool, H.E.M. 1991: ‘The evidence for the production of glass in Roman Britain’, in Foy, D. and Sennequier, G. (eds), Ateliers de verriers de l'antiquité à la period pré-industrielle, Actes du 4e Rencontres d'Association Française pour de l'Archèologie du Verre 1989, Rouen, 2330Google Scholar
Shepherd, J. 1996: ‘Reconstructing a Roman furnace’, Glass News 2, 68Google Scholar
Shepherd, J.D., and Heyworth, M. 1991: ‘Le travail du verre dans Londres romain (Londinium): un état de la question’, in Foy, D. and Sennequier, G. (eds), Ateliers de verriers de l'antiquité à la period pré-industrielle, Actes du 4e Rencontres de l'Association Française pour l'Archèologie du Verre 1989, Rouen, 1322Google Scholar
Shirley, E.A.M. 1996: ‘The building of the legionary fortress at Inchtuthil’, Britannia 27, 111–28Google Scholar
Swan, V.G. 1992: ‘Legio VI and its men: African legionaries in Britain’, Journal of Roman Pottery Studies 5, 133Google Scholar
Ward-Perkins, J.B. 1981: Roman Imperial Architecture, HarmondsworthGoogle Scholar
Weinburg, G.D. 1988: Excavations at Jalame. Site of a Glass Factory in Late Roman Palestine, ColumbiaGoogle Scholar
Zienkiewicz, J.D. 1986: The Legionary Fortress Baths at Caerleon. Volume I: The Buildings, CardiffGoogle Scholar