Old English glassesAn account of glass drinking vessels in England, from early times to the end of the eighteenth centuryWith introductory notices, original documents, etc . lity is. Similarly the Sacro Journal, vol. xiv. p. 8. Paper on the Precious Objects Catino at Genoa has been variously asserted to be the in the Church at Monza, by W. Purges, dish which held the Paschal Lamb at the Last Supper, or - See Archaeologia, vol. xlii. p. 3S7, On a Lamp of the vessel in which Joseph of Arimathea received the Persian Ware, etc., paper by Mr. C. D. E. from the Pierced Side; it is a he
Old English glassesAn account of glass drinking vessels in England, from early times to the end of the eighteenth centuryWith introductory notices, original documents, etc . lity is. Similarly the Sacro Journal, vol. xiv. p. 8. Paper on the Precious Objects Catino at Genoa has been variously asserted to be the in the Church at Monza, by W. Purges, dish which held the Paschal Lamb at the Last Supper, or - See Archaeologia, vol. xlii. p. 3S7, On a Lamp of the vessel in which Joseph of Arimathea received the Persian Ware, etc., paper by Mr. C. D. E. from the Pierced Side; it is a hexagonal dish long SEC. VI. ORIENTAL. 21 in 1244 by Guy de Rousillon. This was probably Oriental. The king valued it so muchthat he sent it to Edward of Westminster, the goldsmith, with orders to remove the o-lassfoot and to replace it with one of silver-gilt, apparently to add a cover to it, to hoop it withsilver, and to present it on his behalf to the queen. Of about this date must be one of theso-called Hedwigs glasses, preserved in the Museum of Silesian Antiquities at Breslau,Oriental, de Damas, of light greenish glass and decorated at the top and the bottom with.
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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectglassmanufacture