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Considerations on the Function and Provenance of the Glass in the Plato von Ustinow Collection
Author(s) -
Dominic Ingemark
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
clara
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2464-3726
DOI - 10.5617/clara.8777
Subject(s) - homogeneous , provenance , byzantine architecture , archaeology , palestine , pottery , ancient history , history , art , classics , geology , mathematics , petrology , combinatorics
The Russian émigré Plato von Ustinow – who settled in Palestine in 1862 and lived there until 1913 – was a keen collector of antiquities. In contrast to other collectors, however, von Ustinow did not purchase the objects from art-dealers. Instead, he appears to have worked with professional archaeologists, but also bought objects from local inhabitants in Jaffa and Jerusalem. His collection includes a substantial number of glass vessels: primarily blown vessels dating to the first- to sixth- or seventh century CE, i.e. the Roman and Early Byzantine era. The von Ustinow collection is comparatively homogeneous, and most of the objects are likely to stem from a relatively limited geographical area, as it closely resembles material from funerary contexts found in modern-day Israel. The collection includes a number of perfume bottles, small jars and kohl-flasks, objects most probably utilised in the preparation of the deceased before burial.

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