The Glass Tiles from Saint-Sauveur ( Burgundy, France)
L. van Wersch
(1)
,
Bernard Gratuze
(2)
,
François Mathis
(3)
,
Marie Bonnin
,
David Strivay
(4)
,
H. da Mota
,
Christian Sapin
(5)
Bernard Gratuze
- Fonction : Auteur
- PersonId : 20429
- IdHAL : bernard-gratuze
- ORCID : 0000-0001-6136-8085
- IdRef : 033805776
Marie Bonnin
- Fonction : Auteur
H. da Mota
- Fonction : Auteur
Christian Sapin
- Fonction : Auteur
- PersonId : 9889
- IdHAL : christian-sapin
- ORCID : 0000-0002-5573-3709
- IdRef : 029806542
Résumé
Eight glass tiles from Saint-Sauveur in Burgundy, which are considered to be of early medieval date, were investigated. These tiles, which are in a good state of preservation, are 10 centimeters square and nearly two centimeters thick. They are made of dark glass with red and white glass inlays. These glass tiles have often been compared with those from the early medieval monastery of Corvey in Germany. However, because they lack an archaeological context, their date is uncertain.
PIXE-PIGE and LA-ICP-MS analyses revealed a wood-ash glass composition, close to that of High Lime Low Alkali (HLLA) glass dating from the 14th century and later. The authors’ trace analyses confirm the more recent dating because the elements associated with cobalt reveal sources used only from the 16th century.
Format du dépôt | Notice |
---|---|
Type de dépôt | Article dans une revue |
Titre |
en
The Glass Tiles from Saint-Sauveur ( Burgundy, France)
|
Résumé |
en
Eight glass tiles from Saint-Sauveur in Burgundy, which are considered to be of early medieval date, were investigated. These tiles, which are in a good state of preservation, are 10 centimeters square and nearly two centimeters thick. They are made of dark glass with red and white glass inlays. These glass tiles have often been compared with those from the early medieval monastery of Corvey in Germany. However, because they lack an archaeological context, their date is uncertain.
PIXE-PIGE and LA-ICP-MS analyses revealed a wood-ash glass composition, close to that of High Lime Low Alkali (HLLA) glass dating from the 14th century and later. The authors’ trace analyses confirm the more recent dating because the elements associated with cobalt reveal sources used only from the 16th century.
|
Auteur(s) |
L. van Wersch
1
, Bernard Gratuze
2
, François Mathis
3
, Marie Bonnin
, David Strivay
4
, H. da Mota
, Christian Sapin
5
1
UCL -
Université Catholique de Louvain = Catholic University of Louvain
( 92863 )
- Place de l'Université 1 - 1348 Louvain-La-Neuve
- Belgique
2
IRAMAT-CEB -
IRAMAT - Centre Ernest Babelon
( 238248 )
- Institut de Recherche sur les Archéomatériaux IRAMAT - 3D, Rue de la Férollerie - 45071 Orléans cedex 2
- France
3
Centre Européen d'Archéométrie
( 233165 )
- Belgique
4
Institut de Physique Nucléaire
( 59489 )
- Atomique et Spectroscopie
- Belgique
5
ARTeHiS -
Archéologie, Terre, Histoire, Sociétés [Dijon]
( 184759 )
- Université de Bourgogne - 6, Bd. Gabriel - 21000 Dijon
- France
|
Comité de lecture |
Oui
|
Audience |
Internationale
|
Numéro |
60
|
Date de publication |
2018
|
Page/Identifiant |
163-181
|
Langue du document |
Anglais
|
Nom de la revue |
|
Vulgarisation |
Non
|
Référence interne |
|
Domaine(s) |
|
Mots-clés |
en
Glass analysis
|
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