Glass didn't come to Britain until the Romans brought it.
Pha ! What did they ever do for us?...............Glass didn't come to Britain until the Romans brought it.
Faience is now really two things.
Originally it's non clay ceramic....mostly quartz/ sand, so the first glass.
Later on the name is used for tin glazed ceramics.
If you look up Faience and bear in mind that you're looking for the earlier meaning, there's a lot online, not just in academic texts.
Beads, little moulded images, etc.,
I'm also confused and clearly out of my depth.
When was what we know as Glass ( transparent and or coloured intentionally or not ) found in usage for such things as basic windows , basic glass bottles
Sorry - I may have not posed my initial question as specific as i needed too.
You asked about rudimentary glass, so that's faience.
Glass as in transparent (mind opaque can let through a lot of light, old lanterns were made with fine slices of horn) then it's Mesopotamia about 4,000 years ago, made from sand, soda and lime, iirc.
Glass as in window panes.....well it's has to be poured and it has to be poured onto something flat (the bullseye was where the last of it fell) that will take the heat without leaving the glass full of impurities.....window glass, as we know it, was poured/rolled on metal tables. This all comes much later. Glass was expensive, labour intensive, even if it was just made from sand. The claim is that it was first produced 1st C ad in Alexandria in Egypt.....it was Roman at that point though.
Now you're confusing me; I thought the very definition of faience was that it was made of quartz. I appreciate it has 'glass like qualities', in terms of it's gloss and texture etc. but I thought it was always opaque, can it be transparent? If so, I've been working from the wrong base line
It is this part I don't quite get as quartz is pure SiO2.sand is mostly silica (silicon dioxide, as you say), quartz is considered an impurity