The discovery of glass
Natural glass has existed since the beginnings of time, formed
when certain types of rocks melt as a result of high-temperature
phenomena such as volcanic eruptions, lightning strikes or the
impact of meteorites, and then cool and solidify rapidly.
Stone-age man is believed to have used cutting tools made of
obsidian (a natural glass of volcanic origin also known as
hyalopsite, Iceland agate, or mountain mahogany) and tektites
(naturally-formed glasses of extraterrestrial or other origin,
also referred to as obsidianites).
According to the ancient-Roman historian Pliny (AD 23-79),
Phoenician merchants transporting stone actually discovered
glass (or rather became aware of its existence accidentally) in
the region of Syria around 5000 BC. Pliny tells how the
merchants, after landing, rested cooking pots on blocks of
nitrate placed by their fire. With the intense heat of the fire,
the blocks eventually melted and mixed with the sand of the
beach to form an opaque liquid.
This brief history looks, however, at the
origins and evolution of man-made glass.
5000 BC
A craft is born
The earliest man-made glass objects, mainly non-transparent
glass beads, are thought to date back to around 3500 BC, with
finds in Egypt and Eastern Mesopotamia. In the third millennium,
in central Mesopotamia, the basic raw materials of glass were
being used principally to produce glazes on pots and vases. The
discovery may have been coincidental, with calciferous sand
finding its way into an overheated kiln and combining with soda
to form a coloured glaze on the ceramics. It was then, above
all, Phoenician merchants and sailors who spread this new art
along the coasts of the Mediterranean.
3500 BC
The oldest fragments of glass vases (evidence
of the origins of the hollow glass industry), however, date back
to the 16th century BC and were found in Mesopotamia. Hollow
glass production was also evolving around this time in Egypt,
and there is evidence of other ancient glassmaking activities
emerging independently in Mycenae (Greece), China and North
Tyrol.
16th century BC
Early hollow glass
production
After 1500 BC, Egyptian craftsmen are known to have begun
developing a method for producing glass pots by dipping a core
mould of compacted sand into molten glass and then turning the
mould so that molten glass adhered to it. While still soft, the
glass-covered mould could then be rolled on a slab of stone in
order to smooth or decorate it. The earliest examples of
Egyptian glassware are three vases bearing the name of the
Pharaoh Thoutmosis III (1504-1450 BC), who brought glassmakers
to Egypt as prisoners following a successful military campaign
in Asia.
1500 BC
There is little evidence of further evolution
until the 9th century BC, when glassmaking revived in
Mesopotamia. Over the following 500 years, glass production
centred on Alessandria, from where it is thought to have spread
to Italy.
9th century BC
The first glassmaking "manual" dates back to
around 650 BC. Instructions on how to make glass are contained
in tablets from the library of the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal
(669-626 BC).
650 BC
Starting to blow
A major breakthrough in glassmaking was the discovery of
glassblowing some time between 27 BC and AD 14, attributed to
Syrian craftsmen from the Sidon-Babylon area. The long thin
metal tube used in the blowing process has changed very little
since then. In the last century BC, the ancient Romans then
began blowing glass inside moulds, greatly increasing the
variety of shapes possible for hollow glass items.
27 BC-AD 14
The Roman connection
The Romans also did much to spread glassmaking technology. With
its conquests, trade relations, road building, and effective
political and economical administration, the Roman Empire
created the conditions for the flourishing of glassworks across
western Europe and the Mediterranean. During the reign of the
emperor Augustus, glass objects began to appear throughout
Italy, in France, Germany and Switzerland. Roman glass has even
been found as far afield as China, shipped there along the silk
routes.
It was the Romans who began to use glass for
architectural purposes, with the discovery of clear glass
(through the introduction of manganese oxide) in Alexandria
around AD 100. Cast glass windows, albeit with poor optical
qualities, thus began to appear in the most important buildings
in Rome and the most luxurious villas of Herculaneum and
Pompeii.
With the geographical division of the empires,
glass craftsmen began to migrate less, and eastern and western
glassware gradually acquired more distinct characteristics.
Alexandria remained the most important glassmaking area in the
East, producing luxury glass items mainly for export. The world
famous Portland Vase is perhaps the finest known example of
Alexandrian skills. In Rome's Western empire, the city of Köln
in the Rhineland developed as the hub of the glassmaking
industry, adopting, however, mainly eastern techniques. Then,
the decline of the Roman Empire and culture slowed progress in
the field of glassmaking techniques, particularly through the
5th century. Germanic glassware became less ornate, with
craftsmen abandoning or not developing the decorating skills
they had acquired.
AD 100
The early Middle Ages
Archaeological excavations on the island of Torcello near
Venice, Italy, have unearthed objects from the late 7th and
early 8th centuries which bear witness to the transition from
ancient to early Middle Ages production of glass.
7th-8th
centuries
Towards the year 1000, a significant change in
European glassmaking techniques took place. Given the
difficulties in importing raw materials, soda glass was
gradually replaced by glass made using the potash obtained from
the burning of trees. At this point, glass made north of the
Alps began to differ from glass made in the Mediterranean area,
with Italy, for example, sticking to soda ash as its dominant
raw material.
1000
Sheet glass skills
The 11th century also saw the development by German glass
craftsmen of a technique - then further developed by Venetian
craftsmen in the 13th century - for the production of glass
sheets. By blowing a hollow glass sphere and swinging it
vertically, gravity would pull the glass into a cylindrical
"pod" measuring as much as 3 metres long, with a width of up to
45 cm. While still hot, the ends of the pod were cut off and the
resulting cylinder cut lengthways and laid flat. Other types of
sheet glass included crown glass (also known as "bullions"),
relatively common across western Europe. With this technique, a
glass ball was blown and then opened outwards on the opposite
side to the pipe. Spinning the semi-molten ball then caused it
to flatten and increase in size, but only up to a limited
diameter. The panes thus created would then be joined with lead
strips and pieced together to create windows. Glazing remained,
however, a great luxury up to the late Middle Ages, with royal
palaces and churches the most likely buildings to have glass
windows. Stained glass windows reached their peak as the Middle
Ages drew to a close, with an increasing number of public
buildings, inns and the homes of the wealthy fitted with clear
or coloured glass decorated with historical scenes and coats of
arms.11th century
Venice
In the Middle Ages, the Italian city of Venice assumed its role
as the glassmaking centre of the western world. The Venetian
merchant fleet ruled the Mediterranean waves and helped supply
Venice's glass craftsmen with the technical know-how of their
counterparts in Syria, and with the artistic influence of Islam.
The importance of the glass industry in Venice can be seen not
only in the number of craftsmen at work there (more than 8,000
at one point). A 1271 ordinance, a type of glass sector statute,
laid down certain protectionist measures such as a ban on
imports of foreign glass and a ban on foreign glassmakers who
wished to work in Venice: non-Venetian craftsmen were themselves
clearly sufficiently skilled to pose a threat.
1271
Until the end of the 13th century, most
glassmaking in Venice took place in the city itself. However,
the frequent fires caused by the furnaces led the city
authorities, in 1291, to order the transfer of glassmaking to
the island of Murano. The measure also made it easier for the
city to keep an eye on what was one of its main assets, ensuring
that no glassmaking skills or secrets were exported.
1291
In the 14th century, another important Italian
glassmaking industry developed at Altare, near Genoa. Its
importance lies largely in the fact that it was not subject to
the strict statutes of Venice as regards the exporting of glass
working skills. Thus, during the 16th century, craftsmen from
Altare helped extend the new styles and techniques of Italian
glass to other parts of Europe, particularly France.
14th century
In the second half of the 15th century, the
craftsmen of Murano started using quartz sand and potash made
from sea plants to produce particularly pure crystal. By the end
of the 16th century, 3,000 of the island's 7,000 inhabitants
were involved in some way in the glassmaking industry.
15th-16th
centuries
Lead crystal
The development of lead crystal has been attributed to the
English glassmaker George Ravenscroft (1618-1681), who patented
his new glass in 1674. He had been commissioned to find a
substitute for the Venetian crystal produced in Murano and based
on pure quartz sand and potash. By using higher proportions of
lead oxide instead of potash, he succeeded in producing a
brilliant glass with a high refractive index which was very well
suited for deep cutting and engraving.
1674
Advances from France
In 1688, in France, a new process was developed for the
production of plate glass, principally for use in mirrors, whose
optical qualities had, until then, left much to be desired. The
molten glass was poured onto a special table and rolled out
flat. After cooling, the plate glass was ground on large round
tables by means of rotating cast iron discs and increasingly
fine abrasive sands, and then polished using felt disks. The
result of this "plate pouring" process was flat glass with good
optical transmission qualities. When coated on one side with a
reflective, low melting metal, high-quality mirrors could be
produced.
France also took steps to promote its own
glass industry and attract glass experts from Venice; not an
easy move for Venetians keen on exporting their abilities and
know-how, given the history of discouragement of such behaviour
(at one point, Venetian glass craftsmen faced death threats if
they disclosed glassmaking secrets or took their skills abroad).
The French court, for its part, placed heavy duties on glass
imports and offered Venetian glassmakers a number of incentives:
French nationality after eight years and total exemption from
taxes, to name just two.
1688
From craft to industry
It was not until the latter stages of the Industrial Revolution,
however, that mechanical technology for mass production and
in-depth scientific research into the relationship between the
composition of glass and its physical qualities began to appear
in the industry.
Industrial Revolution
A key figure and one of the forefathers of
modern glass research was the German scientist Otto Schott
(1851-1935), who used scientific methods to study the effects of
numerous chemical elements on the optical and thermal properties
of glass. In the field of optical glass, Schott teamed up with
Ernst Abbe (1840-1905), a professor at the University of Jena
and joint owner of the Carl Zeiss firm, to make significant
technological advances
.Another major contributor in the evolution
towards mass production was Friedrich Siemens, who invented the
tank furnace. This rapidly replaced the old pot furnace and
allowed the continuous production of far greater quantities of
molten glass.
late 19th century
Increasing automation
Towards the end of the 19th century, the American engineer
Michael Owens (1859-1923) invented an automatic bottle blowing
machine which only arrived in Europe after the turn of the
century. Owens was backed financially by E.D.L. Libbey, owner of
the Libbey Glass Co. of Toledo, Ohio. By the year 1920, in the
United States, there were around 200 automatic Owens Libbey
Suction Blow machines operating. In Europe, smaller, more
versatile machines from companies like O'Neill, Miller and Lynch
were also popular.
Added impetus was given to automatic
production processes in 1923 with the development of the gob
feeder, which ensured the rapid supply of more consistently
sized gobs in bottle production. Soon afterwards, in 1925, IS
(individual section) machines were developed. Used in
conjunction with the gob feeders, IS machines allowed the
simultaneous production of a number of bottles from one piece of
equipment. The gob feeder-IS machine combination remains the
basis of most automatic glass container production today.
1900-1925
Modern flat glass
technology
In the production of flat glass (where, as explained earlier,
molten glass had previously been poured onto large tables then
rolled flat into "plates", cooled, ground and polished before
being turned over and given the same treatment on the other
surface), the first real innovation came in 1905 when a Belgian
named Fourcault managed to vertically draw a continuous sheet of
glass of a consistent width from the tank. Commercial production
of sheet glass using the Fourcault process eventually got under
way in 1914.
Around the end of the First World War, another
Belgian engineer Emil Bicheroux developed a process whereby the
molten glass was poured from a pot directly through two rollers.
Like the Fourcault method, this resulted in glass with a more
even thickness, and made grinding and polishing easier and more
economical.
1905-1914
An off-shoot of evolution in flat glass
production was the strengthening of glass by means of lamination
(inserting a celluloid material layer between two sheets of
glass). The process was invented and developed by the French
scientist Edouard Benedictus, who patented his new safety glass
under the name "Triplex" in 1910.
1910
In America, Colburn developed another method
for drawing sheet glass. The process was further improved with
the support of the US firm Libbey-Owens and was first used for
commercial production in 1917.
1917
The Pittsburgh process, developed by the
American Pennvernon and the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company
(PPG), combined and enhanced the main features of the Fourcault
and Libbey-Owens processes, and has been in use since 1928.
1928
The float process developed after the Second
World War by Britain's Pilkington Brothers Ltd., and introduced
in 1959, combined the brilliant finish of sheet glass with the
optical qualities of plate glass. Molten glass, when poured
across the surface of a bath of molten tin, spreads and flattens
before being drawn horizontally in a continuous ribbon into the
annealing lehr.
1959
Conclusion
Although this brief history comes to a close nearly 40 years
ago, technological evolution naturally continues. Not yet ready
to be "relegated" to a history of glass are areas such as
computerized control systems, coating techniques, solar control
technology and "smart matter", the integration of
micro-electronic and mechanical know-how to create glass which
is able to "react" to external forces.
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