The explosion of research in the field of ancient and historic glasses has opened up glass studies in recent years. However, our deeper understanding of the technology and provenance of Bronze Age Egyptian and Roman glasses in the Mediterranean has not been mirrored by our studies of glasses and other vitreous materials found in the Late Bronze Age Aegean. There are few studies which collate the material culture of the region and still fewer which explore the patterning of vitreous materials in the landscape. Our knowledge of where the material originated and who used it is still incomplete. Therefore, in 2005 a group of scholars in the fields of glass studies and Aegean prehistory came together as part of the Sheffield Centre for Aegean Archaeology's Round Table discussions to bring the subject up to date. The central themes to this discussion were based upon provenance, occurrence and the role of vitreous materials in the Late Bronze Age Mediterranean. Nine papers are presented from the discussions by experts in Bronze Age glass and faience and Aegean specialists, who examine a fascinating and diverse selection of topics surrounding the production, movement, use and role of vitreous materials in the Late Bronze Age Aegean. The contributions from John Bennet, Karen Foster, Paul Nicholson, George Nightingale, Marina Panagiotaki, Mark Peters, Thilo Rehren, Sue Sherratt and Mike Tite bring together our current understanding of these materials and their role in the societies who used them.
Table of Chronology (Jacke Phillips)
Vitreous materials in the Late Bronze Age Aegean: A window to the East Mediterranean (Caroline M Jackson and Emma C Wager)
Glass and faience production sites in New Kingdom Egypt: A review of the evidence (Paul T Nicholson)
Crushed rock and molten salt? Some aspects of the primary glass production at Qantir/Pi-Ramesse (Thilo Rehren and Edgar B Pusch)
The technological development of Aegean vitreous materials in the Bronze Age (Marina Panagiotaki)
Tiny, fragile, common, precious. Mycenaean glass and faience beads and other objects (Georg Nightingale)
The scientific examination of Aegean vitreous materials - problems and potentials (Michael Tite, Andrew Shortland, Gareth Hatton, Yannis Maniatis, Despina Kavoussanaki, Mathilda Pyrli and Marina Panagiotaki)
Relief beads and glass seals: Design and craftsmen (Helen Hughes-Brock)
Palace TM: Speculations on palatial production in Mycenean Greece with (some) reference to glass (John Bennet)
Minoan faience revisited (Karen Polinger Foster)
Colour use and symbolism in Bronze Age Crete: Exploring social and technological relationships (Mark Peters)
Vitreous materials in the Bronze and Early Iron Ages: Some questions of values (Susan Sherratt)