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Glass beaker with chariot-racing scene

1/99

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Glass vessels with scenes from the circus or the arena may have been intended as souvenirs, showing not only a picture of the sporting event but the names of the participants, who would have been well known to the fans of the games, just as sporting heroes are today. On this beaker the two lower bands of decoration depict the four competing quadrigae (four-horse chariots). The typical architectural features of the race-track, such as the lap-markers, are also shown. The inscribed upper band records that the charioteer Cresces beat his opponents Hierax, Olympaeus and Antilochus. The cup was made by blowing the glass into a mould. This method of manufacture requires careful preparation in making the mould itself, but the actual process of producing the finished vessels is far quicker than making free-blown glass. It is a form of mass-production comparable with the production of terracotta statuettes, lamps and other pottery utensils in moulds.

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  • Title: Glass beaker with chariot-racing scene
  • Date Created: 1/99
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 84.00mm; Diameter: 77.00mm (of rim)
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: mould-blown
  • Subject: charioteer/chariot; charioteer/chariot-racing
  • Registration number: 1870,0224.3
  • Place: Excavated/Findspot Colchester
  • Period/culture: Romano-British
  • Material: glass
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Bequeathed by Slade, Felix
British Museum

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