Name/Title
Dropper FlaskEntry/Object ID
11NE-Mi58-194Description
The rim is unevenly everted and folded inwards with a funnel mouth. On the exterior of the mouth is a singular trailed ring, applied in one revolution. The cylindrical neck constricts at its base, internally forming a diaphragm with an aperture in the center. The shoulders are gently sloping with five high pinched ribs which begin at the base of the shoulders, ending at the bottom of the squat globular body in less prominent projections. The base has nine pinched "toes" making the vessel slightly lopsided. The vessel is intact with a slight crack, iridescence, and encrustation visible.Context
Sprinkler vessels held perfume, oils, and other costly liquids. The neck of a sprinkler vessel is nearly fully closed as a diaphragm with a small central aperture sits at the base of its neck. The small aperture allows the liquid contents within the bottle to be emptied drop by drop so the user could apply the liquid sparingly, giving the vessel the name "Dropper Flask". Additionally, some catalogues call these vessels "Pomegranate Sprinklers" because when turned upside-down, the pinched toes mimic the shape of a pomegranate. E. M. Stern believes the popularity of the pomegranate-shaped sprinklers were due to the fruit symbolically representing fertility and beauty.Made/Created
Date made
200 CE - 350 CETime Period
Roman Imperial, Late AntiqueEthnography
Culture/Tribe
Near Eastern - Syro-Palestine
Dimensions
Dimension Description
OverallHeight
10 cmDiameter
6.6 cmResearch Notes
Research Type
ReferenceNotes
Israeli, Yael. Ancient Glass in the Israel Museum: The Eliahu Dobkin Collection and Other Gifts. Jerusalem: The Israel Museum, 2003. Note Page 222; Page 225, Cat. 278.Research Type
ReferenceNotes
Haynes, E. Barrington. Glass Through the Ages: with 96 Plates. Suffolk: Penguin Books, 1959. Note Item #3(b).Research Type
ReferenceNotes
Stern, E. Marianne. Roman, Byzantine, and Early Medieval Glass: The Ernesto Wolf Collection. Ostfildern-Ruit: Hatje Cantz Publishers, 2001. Note Page 205, Cat. 136; Page 251, Cat 137.