The colour and golden shine of early silver Islamic lustre
A selection of lustres including 9th century AD polychrome and 10th century AD monochrome Abbasid lustres from Iraq, and 10th to 12th centuries AD Fatimid lustres from Egypt and Syria is studied in the present paper. The selection is based on previous studies that demonstrated that all of them conta...
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Zusammenfassung: | A selection of lustres including 9th century AD polychrome and 10th century AD
monochrome Abbasid lustres from Iraq, and 10th to 12th centuries AD Fatimid lustres from Egypt
and Syria is studied in the present paper. The selection is based on previous studies that
demonstrated that all of them contain metal silver nanoparticles and copper, which, when present,
appears either as Cuþ or Cu2þ dissolved in the glaze. They show different colours, green, yellow,
amber, and brown, and may also show or lack a golden-like reflectivity, which results mainly from
average size and concentration in the layer of the silver nanoparticles. In this paper, a depth profile
composition of the lustre layers is determined using Rutheford Backscattering Spectroscopy,
allowing the determination of the total silver content, concentration of silver, copper to silver ratio,
and thickness of the lustre layers. We show that the enhanced golden-like reflectivity occurs only
for layers with a high concentration of silver, and that the addition of PbO to the alkaline glaze
helps the formation of more concentrated layers. The results obtained provide new hints concerning the lead enrichment of the glazes during this period.
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