Flexible glass

Summary

Allegedly, flexible glass is a lost invention from the time of the reign of Tiberius Caesar. The story is almost certainly false.[1]

Mythology edit

According to Petronius (c. 27 AD – c. 66 AD) in his work Satyricon, the inventor of flexible glass (vitrum flexile) brought a drinking bowl made of the material before Tiberius Caesar. The bowl was put through a test to break it, but it merely dented, rather than shattering. The inventor repaired the bowl very easily with a small hammer, which he pulled from a pocket in his toga, according to Petronius. After the inventor swore that he was the only man alive who knew the manufacturing technique, Tiberius had the man beheaded. He feared that the glass would devalue gold and silver, since the material might be more valuable.[2]

Pliny the Elder (c. 23 AD – c. 79 AD) also included the story about the flexible glass in his encyclopedic work Naturalis Historia (XXXVI.66.195), but added that the story is "more widely spread than well authenticated."[3]

Later during the Early Middle Ages, the story was retold by Isidore of Seville (c. 560 AD – c. 636 AD) in Etymologiae (XVI.16.6), De vitro, which in turn is included in pseudo-Heraclius's 13th century collection of technical recipes.[4]

However, these stories are commonly assumed to be either false or exaggerated. Historian Robert Jacobus Forbes believed that flexile referred to "bent" glass, such as handles used in stoneware.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ Carrier, Richard (2017-12-01). The Scientist in the Early Roman Empire. Pitchstone Publishing (US&CA). ISBN 978-1-63431-107-6. From the context we can be certain of two things: the story is either untrue or wildly incorrect, and Trimalchio is being made to look like an idiot for telling it. [...] We can also assume no such thing ever existed.
  2. ^ Petronius. "Section 51". Satyricon.
  3. ^ Pliny the Elder. Natural History XXXVI.66.
  4. ^ Isidore of Seville (2006). The Etymologies. Translated by Stephen A. Barney; W. J. Lewis; J. A. Beach; Oliver Berghof. Cambridge University Press. p. 328. ISBN 0-521-83749-9.
  5. ^ Forbes, Robert James (1965). Studies in Ancient Technology. Brill Archive. p. 173.