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Date-shaped Bottle

Date: Mid-first to early second century
Dimensions:
H: 2 15/16 in. (7.4 cm); Rim Diam: 13/16 in. (2.1 cm); Body Diam: 1 5/16 in. (3.4 cm)
Medium: Glass; mold blown, tooled
Place of Origin: Phoenicia
Classification: Glass
Credit Line: Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number: 1923.577
Label Text:The date palm tree was one of the prized plants of the Mediterranean world as its fruit was so useful and delicious—even the pits were used for fuel. First made in the Roman Imperial period, glass vessels in the shape of dried dates were incredibly popular for holding perfume or medicines.

Most likely, a real dried fruit was used to make a mold of clay or plaster and then glass was blown into the mold to create the vessel. The neck and rim would have been tooled and added to the body. These objects were often included in burials as personal items for the deceased.

DescriptionTranslucent brownish yellow. Medium thin glass. Small bubbles, vertically elongated in body and neck, some spherical in body.
Rim tooled. Body blown into a two-part mold of two vertical sections. Exceptionally pronounced continuous mold seam around body, extends onto both sides of neck (MCT VIII).

Everted rim, folded inward and downward. Flaring neck. Body shaped like a date with an irregular cross section.

Relief pattern of wavy ridges and hooks, imitating the wrinkles in the skin of a ripe date.
Translucent brownish yellow.
Rim tooled. Body blown into a two-part mold of two vertical sections. Exceptionally pronounced continuous mold seam around body, extends onto both sides of neck (MCT VIII).

Everted rim, folded inward and downward. Flaring neck. Body shaped like a date with an irregular cross section.

Relief pattern of wavy ridges and hooks, imitating the wrinkles in the skin of a ripe date.
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