guy Posted November 19, 2025 Report Share Posted November 19, 2025 (edited) There have been previous posts about Roman cage cups (see below). From Wikipedia: “A cage or reticulated cup", with "an outer cage or shell of decoration that stands out from the body of the cup." It has mostly been accepted that the cage cups were made by cutting and grinding a solid, thick glass blank, a labor-intensive technique at which the Greeks and Romans were very skilled. (Wikipedia) A recent assessment of a late-Roman cage cup suggests that the abstract symbols (diamonds, leaves, or crosses) were not just decorative. They served as the makers’ marks—signatures of the artisans and workshops who crafted the glass. Recent research by Hallie Meredith (Washington State University) has shown that the abstract symbols long overlooked on late Roman glass cage cups (diatreta) are not decorative “stop marks” but workshop makers’ marks—signatures of the craft teams who created these luxury vessels between the 3rd and 6th centuries CE. Discovery: Both the Phys.org report and Meredith’s article in the Journal of Glass Studies emphasize how motifs such as diamonds, leaves, crosses, cornucopia, and staurograms served as identifiers of workshops, similar to ancient trademarks. Evidence: Several vessels from different collections and excavation sites (Cologne, Autun, Montenegro, Hungary, Rome) feature identical or nearly identical symbols alongside inscriptions, confirming they were deliberately used as markers of origin. Production Insight: Diatreta were carved from thick glass blanks into two concentric layers joined by delicate bridges. This process required teams of engravers, polishers, and apprentices, not just solitary masters. The marks reveal collective labor and regional artisan networks. Interpretation: Meredith views these symbols as “imagistic script”—visual forms of writing, such as monograms or pseudo-script with communicative intent. They demonstrate multilingual artisans adapting scripts for different audiences. Significance: Recognizing makers’ marks challenges centuries of misinterpretation and brings visibility to the anonymous craftworkers behind Rome’s most stunning glassware. It reframes diatreta not just as feats of technique but as proof of organized craft communities, branding, and social identity in late antiquity. Future Work: Meredith is compiling a database of non-standard inscriptions to further trace these networks, with her upcoming monograph (The Roman Craftworkers of Late Antiquity) expanding this social history of glass production. ✨ Roman cage cups were not anonymous masterpieces but branded products of collaborative workshops. https://phys.org/news/2025-11-hidden-signatures-ancient-rome-master.html https://journals.publishing.umich.edu/jgs/article/id/6943/ Edited November 19, 2025 by guy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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