Ancient Mediterranean

Alabastron (Container for Scented Oil)

6th-4th century BCE
Glass, core-formed technique
3.8 × 3.8 cm (1.5 × 1.5 in)

SEE IT IN PERSON

Not currently on view

In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026

View at artic.eduPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG

Initially affordable only among the wealthy, glass was used in ancient Rome as containers for oils, perfume, and tablewares. In the ancient Mediterranean world, scented oils, usually olive oil based, were generally used rather than alcohol-based perfumes. This vessel is called an “alabastron” because objects of this shape were originally made of alabaster. Core-formed glass was made by dipping a removable core that gives the vessel its shape into a molten glass mixture. The pattern was created by trailing threads of glass mixture of different colors over the body of the vessel, then combing the threads with a pointed tool.

Source ↗

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More by Ancient Mediterranean

Necklace with AmuletsNecklace with AmuletsBottle in the Shape of a BirdBottle in the Shape of a BirdCosmetic ApplicatorCosmetic ApplicatorFragment of an InlayFragment of an InlayVaseVaseBottleBottleBottleBottleAmphoriskos (Container for Oil)Amphoriskos (Container for Oil)

More like this

Alabastron (Container for Scented Oil)Ancient Greek — Alabastron (Container for Scented Oil)JugAncient Levantine — JugBottleIslamic — BottleAlabastron (Container for Scented Oil)Ancient Greek — Alabastron (Container for Scented Oil)BottleAncient Egyptian — BottleVaseAncient Egyptian — VaseAmulet of a Papyrus ColumnAncient Egyptian — Amulet of a Papyrus ColumnFlaskAncient Roman — FlaskAmphora (Storage Jar)Ancient Egyptian — Amphora (Storage Jar)Amulet of a Papyrus ColumnAncient Egyptian — Amulet of a Papyrus ColumnAlabastron (Container for Scented Oil)Ancient Eastern Mediterranean — Alabastron (Container for ScCosmetic ContainerAncient Roman — Cosmetic Container