Glass jug with chain handle

Roman

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 169

Colorless with pale blue green tinge; handle and trails in same glass.
Outsplayed rim with flattened upper lip; funnel-shaped mouth and almost no neck; conical body, then turned in sharply with broad, horizontal undercurve; applied solid foot ring, sloping outwards; central kick in bottom with circular pontil mark; chain handle applied to body as two large, thick pads, drawn up and outwards as two rods, pinched together five times to form vertical row of loop, then turned in as a single strap, folded up into a hollow loop above rim, and trailed off in a double fold down underside of mouth over upper trail.
Single thick horizontal trail on underside of mouth below rim; a finer trail wound horizontally slightly more than once around top of body; body decorated with a pattern of twenty ribs extending from mouth to edge of side, becoming faint towards bottom.
Complete except for weathered chip in rim, with cracks around mouth and top of body; some pinprick bubbles in foot ring; limy encrustation, dulling, iridescence, and creamy brown weathering, with soil encrustation on handle and interior.
The jug is said to have been found in a Roman tomb at the ancient site of Caesaromagus in 1863, together with another smaller jug (81.10.169), a cup (81.10.85), and a coin of the Gallic emperor Postumus, which was minted between A.D. 260 and 268.

Glass jug with chain handle, Glass, Roman

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