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Two-segment bead

Part of the collection: Middle Ages

Popularization note

A glass two-segment bead, decorated with gold foil, discovered during excavations in 1961 on the site of an early-medieval stronghold in Kamień Pomorski, was made by pulling a glass tube, applying gold foil to it, which was then covered with a second layer of glass mass. In this technique, the glass mass was cut into sections and shaped with special tongs. The beads made in this way have a very characteristic bubble-like shape. The cylindrical beads formed from the glass tube were often further processed by annealing or sanding off any irregularities. The most common method of making glass beads in the early Middle Ages used the winding technique, which involved winding a thread or strip of heated glass onto a hot rod. As a result, glass beads often had traces of tape ends or clumping left on the surface. Another way of making beads was the so-called drop technique. In this technique, a small amount of glass mass was scooped onto a heated rod, dropped onto a washer, and then pierced with the hot rod. Ornaments were applied to the formed but not yet cooled beads – usually in the form of pieces of glass string, singular or multiple, formed in waves, zig-zag patterns or straight lines.

Ewa Górkiewicz-Bucka

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown (craftsman)
Slavic

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 1.2 cm

Object type

bead, jewellery

Technique

glass pipe pulling, impressing

Origin / acquisition method

field research

Creation time / dating

701 — 1200

Creation / finding place

znalezienie: Kamień Pomorski (województwo zachodniopomorskie)

Owner

Muzeum Narodowe w Szczecinie

Identification number

MNS/A/19614/17

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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