3.9 Article

Glassmaking remains from the 12th to 14th centuries CE glass workshop in Boshan, Shandong Province, China

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DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2023.104289

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Boshan glass workshop; Glass crucible; K 2 O-CaO-SiO 2 glass; Yanshan Miscellany

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This article introduces the archaeological discovery of glass furnaces and manufacturing workshops from the Jin to Ming Dynasties in Yanshen Town, Zibo city, Shandong province. Through chemical and microstructural analysis, the glass recipe and manufacturing process were determined.
Many glass furnaces producing K2O-CaO-SiO2 glass were excavated in Yanshen Town, Zibo city, Shandong province, dating to the Jin to Ming Dynasties, a large-scale glass-making center recorded in historical sources. According to the typological study of ceramics, the workshop which produced the studied samples dated from the Jin to the Yuan Dynasties (12th to 14th centuries CE), and is one of the earliest archaeological glass workshops found in China. The workshop yielded many semi-finished glass fragments, final products, and glass crucible fragments. We conducted chemical and micro-structural analysis by LA-ICP-AES and SEM-EDS, determining that the glass recipe included feldspar, quartz, nitrate, fluorite, colorants, and probably calcite. These minerals match those in the glass recipes recorded in the historical literature. Glass making comprised at least two steps, namely the pre-melting of raw materials into a semi-finished glass, to which more fluxes were then added to make the final glass products or ingots.

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