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Vase, 3rd century
Provincial Roman
Champlevé enamel, copper alloy; H. 4 3/4 in. (12.1 cm), Diam. 4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm)
Fletcher Fund, 1947 (47.100.5)

When a third-century A.D. Greek writer described the foreign technique of pouring "colors into bronze molds, so that the colors become as hard as stone," he was probably referring to enameling of the type found on this vase. Brilliant red, blue, and green enamels, worked in the champlevé technique, define the foliate ornament encircling the body. To make this kind of embellishment, design shapes are scooped out of the metal ground and filled with powdered glass; then the object is fired. This vase was excavated at La Guierche, France, only thirty-five miles from Limoges, a city that would become synonymous with champlevé enamelwork later in the Middle Ages. Roman coins inside the vase indicate that it was likely made in the second half of the third century.


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    Vase, 3rd century
    Provincial Roman
    Champlevé enamel, copper alloy; H. 4 3/4 in. (12.1 cm), Diam. 4 1/2 in. (11.4 cm)
    Fletcher Fund, 1947 (47.100.5)