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INDEXOF CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS

by Hazel Bell Incorporating and modifying the previous indexes by Peter Lole Indexed publications Key Glass Circle News Issues 1-140 (1977–2016) 1.1 (Issue no.page no(s);)

The Glass Circle Journal 1-11 (1972-2009) JL The Centenary Supplement (2004) CS GCN (2004) Ex.

ExFromcerpts Palace from to the Parlour first 99(2003) issues of PP The Glass Circle Diamond Jubilee 1937–1997 DJ Glass Collectors and their Collections (1999) Col. Strange and Rare: 50th Anniversary Exhibition 1937–1987 SR

Major references to a topic are given in bold type

Abbreviations used: c. GCN for Glass Circle News.

Notesexh. for exhibition; for century; GC for Glass Circle;

Short forms of article and book titles are used. Article titles, and titlesin ofitalics talks reported, are given ‘in quotes’ under the names of the speakers. Book titles are given under the names of the authors, except for multi-author books, listed under their titles. GlassReviewers Circle of books,News andreferences writers of are letters given and in obituaries, the form: are rarely included.

Issue number.page number(s) with the Issue numbers followed by stops; page numbers in the same issue separated by commas; Issue numbers separated by semi-colons. Newsletters for April and July 1983 are both numbered 26; references to those issues are given in the index as 26A and 26Jy. The first page of Issue 115, 2 June 2008, shows Issue number as 114.

Announcements of coming events, advertisements, auctions, fairs, and sales reports are not indexed; of exhibitions, only major ones are indexed. INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 3 collecting 124.6-8 fake 93.8; Ex. 20 comemmorative SR 43 Gask 89.1, 3/10 A dwarf JL 1.47-8, 52, 53 GC meeting on 12.2-3 etched JL 3.38 height 105.9 Aalto, Alvar 60.6 facet-cut stem 2.28-9 ‘KER’ 54.7 Aberdeen Art Gallery 63.8 flute 101.11; JL 2.26-7, 30 Lennoxlove 131.32 Absolon, William 121.3; JL 4.9-10; SR 39 19c. JL 3.87-96 Ogilvy 121.8-9 acid flask 138.5 opaque twist stem JL 2.28, 36 ‘The Peech’ 134.31 acid polishing 79.4 presentation SR 25 ‘Perry’ 34.4 Aesculus bowl 102.18 prices JL 11.66 in Philadelphia 120.13 Afghanistan glassmaking 89.2 ribbed and wrythen JL 1.47, 52, 53 rose and thistle 125.10-11 Afzal, Kalim 76.1 rummers JL 1.49-50, 56 Russell 96.14; 97.12 agate 136.9, 17; 137.4, 25 short and engraved JL 1.48-9, 54 ‘Spottiswood’ 50.1 Agricola, Georgius 1685-1830 JL 1.46-57; 2.26-36 at Traquair House 100.5-7; 105.9 De natura fossilium JL 6.12 special JL 2.29 America De Re Metallica JL 1.20, 27; 7.6, 7, 8, 12 tall JL 2.27-8 GC study tour 138.23-6 Ailsa Jug 31.5; 37.8; 38.2, 8 tankards JL 1.49, 56 see also place names air pollution 111.15-16 tumblers JL 1.49, 55, 56 American architecture 50.8 Airey Cookson & Co. JL 5.76-8 Victorian flutes JL 1.50 American glass 71.2, 12; 77.8-9; 87.4; 96.2; Airlie, Shiona and Brian Blench wine JL 1.49, 52, 55 138.16-19, 139.16-18 400 Years of Glassmaking 122.21 wrythen DJ 23, 33 72.6-7 air-twist stems 106.17; 107.13, 16, 17; 109.8; yard of ale 73.5; JL 1.50 Brilliant-Cut 60.6; PP 7; 116.7; 138.19 123.10, 11; Col. 53; DJ 25-6, 27 ale-testers 53.3; Ex. 9 Glass in early America 77.10 ale JL 2.28, 33 Alexander, Thomas JL 4.6-7 American Cut Glass Association 60.6; 116.7; 124.9; mercurial DJ 44, 45 Alford, Judy: Collecting Crackle Glass 84.11 136.2 opaque white DJ 26-7 Alfred, Prince, collection 68.2 American Journal of Glass Studies DJ 15 Ajka 133.2, 27 Allen, Denise: in Britain 85.6 American Museum, Bath 59.4 alabastra 131.8 Alloa Glassworks 70.12, 13; 93.12; 138.9; American movement 110.7 alchemy 107.6; 124.22; 128.24; 130.19; 131.24 DJ 29 Amsterdam 92.3; 113.5; 129.15; 130.23-4; 134.2; Glass of the Alchemists 116.10, 14-15; 117.3 alphabet plate PP 84, 85 135.3, 4 Aldrevandinus 107.8-9 Alsop, George 101.10 furnace 116.10 Aldrevandinus Beaker 107.1-9 Altare, 84.8; 85.5 Rijksmuseum 66.6; 69.11; 72.7; 113.5; 114.11; ale 94.6, 8 Amberina 44.4; 59.8; 106.12; 114.15; 138.19; 126.1; 140.3 glasses 3.2; 26A.1; 125.23; 126.4; JL 6.56-7 ancient glass see antique glass 127.20-1, 22; 140.3; 44, 48; DJ Amelung, John Frederick 76.6-7; 82.10; 138.16 Andringa, René JL 2.8, 9; SR 20 Amen glasses 12.2-3; 52.10; 61.7; 82.4; 89.1; ‘The function of the firing glass’ 129.9-11 air-twist stem JL 2.28, 33 94.9; 109.4; 119.16; 130.23; Anglo-Saxon glass 100.22; 116.3-5; SR 2 ale and beer JL 1.46-7; 2.26, 36 Col. 23-4, 29; JL 5.4-26; 9.62-3, 64-6 animals, glass 100.17; 111.12-13 balustroid 2.28, 31, 33 JL creator 125.20, 126.3-4 Bimini 111.8-9 Capstan stem JL 1.50, 57 in Drambuie collection 105.14 bull SR 48 champagne JL 2.26, 33; 11.80 Drummond Castle 125.21 claret jugs 80.6; 91.7; Ex. 18 champagne and ale JL 2.8, 9, 29, 31, 36 engraving JL 5.15-26 elephant V56 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 4 flasks 80.6; 81.11; Ex. 18 Czechoslovakia 47.6 112.7; 116.13; 121.3; Col. 49 frog SR 30, 31 Dudley Castle 48.4 Review 68.3 lion PP 74-5 Guildford 58.1, 9 8.1, 2; 110.6 sphinx SR 56 Islamic: wrecked vessel 7.5; 20.2 Locke JL 6.57, 58, 64 see also dogs; horses London Scottish 50.8 Anne, Queen 92.8/11; 114.17; 117.5; 134.31 Foster Lane 24.1; 25.1 9.1; 61.10; 69.4; 77.12;106.16; SR 49 Lambeth 49.1, 2; 64.4 125.26; 137.16; D’Antic, Bosc 45.8; 92.3; 97.14 Mendes, Egypt 70.7 Col. 43; JL 7.55; 11.92-3 antique glass / antiquities 85.7; 96.7; 111.14; Nailsea 32.1-2 see also Vienna Secession 118.16; JL 7.67-77 Newfoundland 70.4 Art Workers’ Guild 129.24 (and meetings held at) Antique Bottles 87.9; 126.25 Rugely 61.13 15.2; 133.27 Antique Glass 81.5/12 17c. glass 40.8 Arts and Crafts 138.27-9 antique sealed bottles 138.6-10 South Yorkshire 19.1 ‘Stained glass and the Arts and Crafts Antiques 36.6 Southampton 2.1 Movement’ 129.23-4 in 119.6, 7 architecture Arwas, Victor collecting 95.4; 131.7-11 American 50.8 The Art of Glass 69.4 English Antique Glass factory 125.27 Crystal Palace 46.1 Ashdown Park Hotel 105.13 fakes 130.7; 131.7-8; 132.5-6 Glass: Structure and Technology in Architecture Ashmolean Museum, Oxford 3.6; 60.7; 61.9; 67.2; prices 1.15-16 88.12 131.24; Col. 25-32 in Toledo 46.5 stained glass 53.5 Ashurst, Denis trade 131.7-11; 132 DJ 30-1 see also buildings, glass in The history of South Yorkshire glass / glasshouses Understanding Antiques 78.9 archives CS 6-7 55.5; 120.3 Antiques Roadshow 106.2; 118.2, 14-15; 123.12, 13; Argand lamps 134.11 Aspreys 36.4; 49.5; 64.8 125.28 Ariteas 138.12 Association des Amateurs de Verres Anciens (AVA) Antiques Trade Gazette 132.31 armonica (harmonica; xylophone), glass 32.5; 37.3; 124.9 magazine 36.6;66.13; 75.5-6 85.3; 87.3; 120.14; 125.3, 27; SR 64 Association for the 61.11; 99.13; apothecaries JL 33-45 armorial glasses 4.3; 86.3; 88.1; 89.12; 99.7; 136.22; 124.9 Arc International 133.2 DJ 47 newsletter 67.11 archaeology 81.3; 82.13; 85.4; 99.13; 110.8; 114.6, Beilby 86.3; 103.14; 106.2, 3; 122.7; 126.22; Association Française pour L’Archeologie du Verre 7; 131.7-10; 131.24; 132.5; 138.11-15 128.4; 131.18-19; 135.22-4 64.5 Archaeological Evidence for Glassworking 127.26 Lambton 122.7 Association Internationale pour L’Histoire du Verre awards 111.18 Royal DJ 43; SR 34 84.15; 97.2, 3; 99.13 Current Archaeology 110.15 PP 12, 13; 122.7; 127.7, 9; 135.22-4 Assyrians SR ix-x, xii MoLAS Monographs 106.10-11; 111.18 weddings 106.16; 113.1; 126.26 Atholl House (Blair Castle) 79.5-6 Pennsylvania 137.6-8 window 1-2.8 auction catalogues 132.4 Project 140.8-14 Arms of War inscription V33 auction houses 136.6-7 reports Arnold, Malcolm SR 5 auctions Apsley Pellat Glasshouse 62.2 69.4; 95.14; 102.7; 113.8-9, 16-17 [regular reports by Henry Fox] Bagots Park 21.2 panels 18.1 estimates 43.9 Canadian Parks Excavation 24.4, 6 Art Fund (formerly National Art Collection Fund) Green Valley Auctions 93.1, 7 Colchester 70.7 15.6; 19.2; 64.1, 2; 71.11; 72.5; 74.8; 80.7; guidelines 139.23 cullet finds 20.2 88.5; 92.8, 11; 97.13, 14; 100.7; 104.7; 109.9; legality 117.16 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 5 1990-2004 CS 21-3 Letter V DJ 29-31 Bargello museum, Florence 117.8, 11 Frederick, Prince 103.14 Mortimer on DJ 33-5 barium glass 104.3 Auschwitz goblet SR 48 papers by DJ 37 Barker, Godfrey 70.3; 71.2 Australia 22.1, 2-3; 24.6; 64.9; 108.8; 109.9; 127.4; Baker, Benjamin 132.24 Barker, T. C. 132.13-14; 133.4 Bailey, John 101.6, 7, 8 The Glassmakers 41.6 Australian Glass of the 19th and early 20th ‘Historical Commemorative glass in the Ulster Baroque glass 136.12-14 century (Graham) 22.5 Museum’ JL 9.69-70 Barovier, Angelo SR x Jam Factory 119.3 Bailly-Pommery & Voutier 102.1 Barrelet, James Melbourne collection 5.4 Baker, Henry JL 3.17-20 La Verrerie en 124.24 Museum of Sydney 22.1; 132.13 Baker, John 132.24 Barrington Haynes, Edward 69.5, 6; 132.19; of Victoria 5.4; 70.1, 6 Chelsea glasshouse 134.35; 137.4 133.22-5; Col. 18 116.18 Vauxhall glasshouse 106.10-11; 114.4; 120.13; Glass Notes 69.6 see also Ceramics & Glass Circle of Australia 132.24 Glass Through the Ages 92.5-6; JL 1.7 Austria 101.2 Baker, Patricia series terms critique 133.22-5 Stubengesellschaft 133.16-17 ‘Studio Glass: Craft or Art?’ 71.3-4 Bartlet, Clive, collection 91.14 see also Vienna; Viennese glass Bakewell, John P. 138.17 basket, glass PP 71 avant-garde 90.8-9 Baldwin, Gary D. Bate, Percy Aventurine SR 60 Artistic Glass 82.8 English Table Glass 5.4; 9.26; 11.14-18 Avery, Victoria ball ornament SR 8, 9 Bath 59.4 ‘The new display ... at the Fitzwilliam Museum’ ballot bowls / ballotting glasses 93.14; 96.1, 4-5; Assembly Rooms 57.4, 5 131.16-20 Ex. 22 Camden Works Museum 22.1 Avon Court 140.9-10 see also election glasses GC visit 57.4-5 Balsamarium SR 4 Bathgate Bowl JL 2.17-25 31.4; 71.8; 93.8; 104.6; 109.8, 12; 110.16, Báthory, Júlia 135.20-1 17; 111.17; 114.17; 115.6; 129.5, 7, 25; 130.3; Battie, D. and S. Cottle, eds. B 134.31; 140.4; Sotheby’s Concise Encyclopaedia of Glass 74.12 Col. 6, 23, 29, 30, 35, 44, 61; Battle of Trafalgar 105.1, 11 Babylonian Clay Tablets 40.10; SR 1 DJ 25, 27, 36, 41-4; Ex. 20 Bauhaus Movement 110.7 59.6; 86.3; 98.14; 99.9 Boosington goblet 129.5; 130.6 Baumgartner, S. tumbler SR 59 dating 82.14; 119.11 Porträtgläser 20.3-4; 33.7 Bacon, John Maunsell 11.1; 63.11; 70.10; 98.2; decadent DJ 35 Baxter, Geoffrey 65.3; 73.1, 10-11; 99.9 102.15; Dutch Newcastle 126.11, 13; 127.6, 9; 130.6 Baynard’s Castle, London 140.11 v, 6, 27, 35-7. 40, 51 Col. fakes 99.3 beach glass 138.5 DJ 13-14, 15-17; JL 1.8; SR 7 in Fitzwilliam Museum 131.17-18 77.7; 93.10; 132.8-12 collection DJ 4, 16-17, 23, 25, 28, 35 giant goblet DJ 20 decorating glass SR 59 ‘The elements of glass collecting’ JL 6.6-7 gin 117.4, 7 diadem SR 3 English Glass Collecting for Beginners DJ 10, 13, Newcastle Light 26A.3-4; 92.1, 2-7; 93.2-3 Glass Beads 132.28-9 17; SR 74 Sang 130.8-10 Levin 34.6 Letter I DJ 21-4 shade SR xi 8.5 Letter II DJ 24-7 bangles SR 7 as payment 97.8 Letter III DJ 27-8 Barbe, Jules PP 24-5; 123.12-13 beadwork picture 84.1 Letter IV 28-9 DJ Barbe Pattern Book 44.2 beakers 107.1, 9; 133.21; 135.5 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 6 Aldrevandinus 107.1-9 Beilby, Richard 127.6-7, 10, 11 DJ 33; JL 11.51, 61 Beakers, Tankards, Goblets 10.4 Beilby, Thomas 33.3-4; 38.3; 106.3; 127.9-10; Beuchner, Tom Bohemian 136.5; SR 59 JL 6.20-31; 9.30, 33, 34-5, 40 ‘Corning’s 1984 exhibition of Emile Gallé’ 28.3-4 claw 64.7; 116.3-5 Beilby, William 15.2; 106.1, 2, 3; 107.9; 127.6-7, Beves, Donald Howard Col. 52-4 gilt 107.14 9-10; 131.19; 135.22, 24; JL 9.31-7 Bewick, Thomas 8.4; 38.3; 106.1-2, 13; 127.6-7, 10; Hyalith 136.17 as drawing master 33.3-4; JL 6.20-13 JL 6.20; 9.31, 35, 39 Lehmann JL 6.8-9, 15 and the art of glass 74.5-6 Memoir 17.2 Lithyalin 136.6, 16 Beilby and Bewick 106.1-2; 127.6-7 Select Fables 106.2, 4 lotus bud 138.13 Beilby glass in Stained Glass, The (ed. T. Dowley) 53.4 nesting DJ 38 armorial 63.8; 66.10; 103.14; 126.22; 127.7, 9; Bickerton, L. M. Syro-Frankish 24.1; 25.1 128.4; 131.18-19; 135.22-4 An Illustrated guide to 18th century Drinking and tumblers 115.14 Beilby Thompson Goblet 106.1, 2, 3, 16; Glasses 36.6; 38.6 see also Luck of Edenhall 108.15; 110.2 Biedermeir Glass 13.1; 27.2 Beale, Scott enamelled 38.3; 106.1, 2-3; 127.6-11 Biedermeier period JL 10.76-8 ‘Salt and sugar shakers’ 131.12-15 light balusters 9.35, 37; JL 5.79-81, 85 Biemann, Dominik 13.1; 102.5-6; 136.6, 7 Bear Garden glasshouse, Bankside 62.2-3; 99.13; Masonic 104.1, 17; 118.1, 18; 127.9, 12-14; JL 10.76-89 108.1, 5 128.4; 129.9-114; 131.29 Biemann, Fritz, collection 30.2; 108.18; 110.16 Beckert, Adolf 90.1 Tilly glasses’ 139.5-7 Biemann, Klaus, collection 136.6-8, 12-14 Bedford, Dukes of 118.1, 4-6; 122.10, 11; 123.10. 11 Belfast 101.6 Billinge, Thomas 4.6 Bedford, John Russell, 4th Duke of JL 11.37-76 Museum 104.7 bills for glass 115.14 Bedford House JL 11.38-9, 40, 44, 55 Belgium 104.3; 125.18 for Clubs JL 9.14-15 Beebe, Jane 55.1 Bell, Hazel 140.2, 5-7 Duke of Bedford’s JL 11.37-8, 40-76 beer 94.6, 8; 126.4; 127.20-2 Bell, Phyllis L. 8.4; 9.2 Glass Sellers Company 79.5-6; 84.9; 91.10; 94.4; bottles 128.6-9; 130.4 ‘Georgian cut glass’ 5.2 96.3; 101.11; 102.7; 116.13; 117.10; decanter 131.19, 20 bells, glass PP 97, 99 122.10-11; JL 9.14-15 glasses 3.2; 125.23; 130.18 Bellanger, Jacqueline 17c. from Scotland 92.12 19c. JL 3.87-96 Verre d’usage et de Prestige 65.5; 86.4 heads 95.4-5 mugs SR 29 Bellflower 112.2 Hoare JL 1.10-17 World of Brewing Museum 15.1, 2; 17.1 Bellingham, John 35.6, 7; 49.1; 106.10, 11; 132.24 Newcastle 95.1, 7, 8 Beggars Benison 63.8; 68.11; 82.4; 83.9; 90.7-8; 99.7 Bendrey, Roy Shuttleworths’ 84.16 Behling, Sophia and Stefan ‘The Falcon Brick Cone Glasshouse’ 63.3; terms used in 94.6-7; 97.8 Glass: Structure and Technology in Architecture JL 8.54-69 Traquair House 100.5-7 88.12 Benson, Janet 55.1; Ex. 11 JL 10.15-33 Beilby 15.2; 73.2; 74.4, 5-6, 13; 79.12; .11; 87.8; ‘Robert J. L. Charleston’ JL 8.10 Bimini 111.8-9, 12 94.1, 11, 12; 97.8; 98.14; Benson, Nigel bird fountain PP 98, 99 Col. 19, 26, 30, 31, 45-6, 47; 85 Glass from the 50s and 60s 98.2 birdcages 107.17 Beilby Oyssey, A 38.8 (with J. Hayhurst) Art Deco to Post Modernism birds, glass 111.12 Beilbys as drawing masters 33.3-4; JL 6.20-31 Cut Glass 97.14 claret jug 91.7 The Ingenious Beilbys 92.2 Beresford, Amanda duck SR 30, 31 Workshop JL 9.27-40 ‘Cecil Higgins Art Gallery, Bedford’ Col. 41-7 eagle bottle 136.2 Beilby, Mary 8.4 15.2; 127.6, 7, 11 Berg, George 136.9-11 ostrich vase PP 77 Beilby, Ralph 106.1; 127.6-7, 10, 11; 131.19 Betts, Thomas 31.4; 58.6; 92.11; 136.9, 11; 137.4 owl decanters 80.6; 81.11; Ex. 18 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 7 parrots PP 84 early 19c. 49.3/8 beer 128.6-9; 130.4 ‘Quatre Pigeons’ 86.1 engraving 51.4; PP 89; 123.22 Black (Green) Bottles 106.7; 110.9 swans PP 74; 110.13 Bohemian decorators 4.20, 23-5, 66; JL 2.38 bladder 138.7 Biringuccio, Vannoccio Bohemian wheel engravers 125.21; JL 6.8-19 carboys 138.8; JL 1.35-6, 44 Pirotechnia JL 1.19-20, 25 Böhm, Augustus 104.13; 115.18; JL 4.66 champagne 99.8 Birmingham Museum 62.5 Bomford Glass Collection 19.2; 27.6 cloak 138.21 biscuit barrel PP 69 bonnet glass SR 20 cylindrical 38.7; 115.15; 138.7, 8 Cups 111.11 Book of the Old Edinburgh Club 114.11 dating 51.10 Bishopp, Hawley 74.8 books 120.8; 121.2; 131.7; 133.5 on dining table 122.10-11 Bismarck decanters 127.27; 129.30 on ancient glass 131.11 eagle 136.2 bitters dispenser 130.25; 131.29 dealer 103.20 figured 112.9 Black (Green) Bottles 106.7; 110.9 on glass, twelve best CS 24 Frongoch Distillery 89.12 Black Creek 31.1 glass-bound 106.6 grape bottles 84.11; 85.9 Blades, John 134.24-5, 27 for children 113.15 ‘gurglets’ 128.7-9 Blair Castle 79.5-6 library of glass- 96.12 Harveys 97.12 Blancourt, Haudicquer de recipe texts 126.18-21 Hungarian 119.3-4 De L’Art de la Verrerie 1.21-2, 29 on stained glass 103.15 imports 8.6 Blakesley, Joseph Williams 102.5-6 technical 106.4 Jamestown 111.4 Blashka, Leopold & Rudolf 79.7; 80.8; 90.14; 91.2 on 20C. glass 108.10 King’s Lynn 29.5 Blench, Brian see also titles (under authors’ names) mallet 138.7 ‘Scottish glass since the war’ 24.5-6 Booth, John: The Art of Fabergé 113.15 with measurement 102.13 Bles, Joseph JL 5.5 borax 110.4 medicinal 73.9; 102.13; 107.6 Rare English Glasses of the 17th & 18th Centuries Boscobel Restoration Mansion 132.14-15 milk 29.6; 126.22 JL 11.10-14, 30-6 Bossanyi, Ervin 46.4 modern, and cullet 122.9 Bloembollenglazenclub 105.5 Boswell, James 122.11; JL 9.11, 12 mould-blown, Roman 138.15 Bloxham, Terry Botley, Henry, collection 82.10 octagonal 138.7 ‘The development of stained glass’ 137.10-13 Böttger, Johann Friedrich JL 7.33 pharmacists’ JL 1.34-8 blue glass 135.2; bottle banks 13.1 pocket bottles see flasks Col. 5; PP 97, 99; 107.8 bottle houses 116.11 poison 73.9; JL 1.37 see also Bristol blue French 81.1 porter 137.8-9 Bly, John bottle seals 38.7; 39.4; 76.4 price 116.11; 122.9 Is it genuine? 37.6 bottle trees 74.7; Ex. 15 in pubs 108.18 bobbin knops DJ 44, 45, 51 bottle vases 133.6 ‘Reclining drunk’ 102.18 Bogardus Globe 70.11, 12 bottle vendors JL 11.53 recycling 13.1; 24.2 Bohemia 92.4-5; 102.5, 7, 9-10; 115.5; 116.6-7; bottlemakers and bottle-making 35.1-2; 126.23 Scottish 87.3 136.13; JL 6.8-19; PP 6 bottles 66.5; 71.7; 75.9; 81.1; 82.11; 84.15; 85.11; shaft & globe 138.6 Weissglas JL 6.8 90.11; 93.8; 94.4; 99.10; 103.15; 116.11; snuff 104.16 Bohemian crystal 15.5; 73.8; 92.4-5; 94.1; 97.8, 13; DJ 49; Ex. 20 spirit PP 75 101.2; 104.13; 107.7; 115.5-6, 18; 133.14; airtrap PP 75 square gin 114.7; 117.6 134.12, 15; 134.33; 136.5, 13-14, 17 Antique Glass Bottles 87.9; 126.25 Swedish 112.9 beads 132.10, 11, 12 antique sealed 138.6-10 from V&A 35.8 coloured 74.6 bedroom JL 5.99 water 22.1; PP 60, 61 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 8 wax-sealed 130.25 Brangwyn, Frank 123.4-6; 125.27 English glass in Col. 1-6 Winchester JL 1.38 Branse, L. J. Great Court 85.2 witch bottles 43.1 A Day in the Life of a Colonial Glassblower 113.15 library 51.8 witch in a bottle 82.13 brass 132.20, 21-2 Masterpieces of Glass 107.5 see also labels; onion bottles; scent bottles; Breadalbane 92.12 1850-1950 glass in JL 7.53-66 wine bottles Brewing Museum, London 15.1, 2; 17.1 19-20c. glass 44.3-4 Boulton, Mathew 94.13 Bricknell, David old glass 119.6, 7 Boulton and Mills glasshouse 102.10 Float: ’ Glass Revolution 124.20-1 symposium held at, 1997 140.30; Col. v Bourquin, J. P. SR 74 bricks, glass 77.6 British Paperweight Society 109.17; 110.18 Bowe, Nicola Gordon bridges 42.4 British Rail Pension Fund collection 20.1; 73.15; The life and works of 47.6 glass 82.14; 91.5 74.2 (with D. Caron and M. Wynn) Gazeteer of Irish see also Forth Bridge; Sunderland Bridge British Studio glass 101.1; 136.22-3; JL 8.88-105 Stained Glass 43.6 Brierley Hill 1.2; 2.1; 104.3; 105.3; 107.12, 13 Broadfield House Glass Museum, Stourbridge 57.4; Bowen, Trevor Collection 12.6; 139.20 63.8; 64.10; 78.4; 80.1, 4-5; 82.4; 83.10; ‘Archaeology of the Nailsea Glassworks’ 32.1-2 Library 3.6 123.12, 13 Bowery (Bowrey), Thomas 128.6-10; 129.19-21 See also Dudley, International Glass Centre, Royal archives 139.21 Bowes, Sir Jerome 129.12, 13 Brierley; Stourbridge ‘British Glass between the Wars’ exh. 38.5 glasshouse, Blackfriars 14.2; 130.17 Brill, Robert H. closes 139.2, 20-1 Bowles, Charles 108.5 Chemical Analyses of Early Glasses 84.11 ‘Collectomania’ exh. 102.18 Bowles, John 62.2-3; 106.11; 108.1, 2-7; 129.19-21; Brilliant Cut Glass 60.6; PP 7; 116.7; 138.19 expansion and reopening, 1994 58.4; 60.5 132.24 Bristol 16.3; 17.2; 19.2-3 Friends of 58.8; 66.3, 7; 138.21; 139.20 Bowles dynasty 62.2-3 Museum Col. 13; 132.23 GC visits to 27.1, 3; 39.1-2 boxwood 106.1-2 Museums and Art Gallery Col. 33-40 Glass Roots project 78.8 Boydell, Dr Brian 71.11 Museum of Industrial Archaeology 8.1 new facility 138.20-2 Boydell, Mary 54.1; 61.10; 64.6 see also Harvey’s Wine Museum; Phoenix opened 12.6; 14.1; 15.1; 39.1-3 ‘A Bohemian master glass engraver in Dublin: glasshouse paperweights 67.13 Franz Tieze’ 51.4 Bristol blue 50.4, 7; PP 18-19; 119.15; 127.6; 134.3 sculpture 75.2 death 125.12 Bristol Glass 54.11 threat to close 118.1, 2, 3, 13; 118.13; 119.3, 18; on Irish glass 126.24, 25 British Artists in Glass 27.5 121.5 ‘The Pugh glasshouse in Dublin’ JL 2.37-48 British Biennale Glass Catalogue 124.21 website 94.14 ‘Recently discovered signatures on glass from British Cast Manufacturers 127.16 Brocard, Philippe-Joseph JL 7.53-4, 61 the Pugh glassworks’ JL 7.50-2 British Glass Biennale 101.1, 3; 118.18; 130.15-16 Brohan, Torsten and Martin Eidelberg ‘Three Williamite glasses’ 44.5; JL 40-9 catalogue 130.26-7 Glass of the Avant-Garde 90.8-9 Boyett, Robert collection 86.1 British Glass Foundation (BGF) 126.22; 136.4; Bronze Age glass JL 7.70-1, 73; 9.41-2 Bradford collection 26A.4; 32.5; 34.2; 37.3 138.20-2; 139.2, 20 ‘Bronze’ ware PP 88; 102.12 Bradley, Stephen Andrew 50.6 British Glass Industry 86.14 Brooklyn Museum 138.25-6 Brain, Colin British Glass Manufacturers Confederation 50.3 Brooks, Brian ‘Before lead crystal’ 129.22 British Museum 52.4; 68.11; 92.8/11; 104.7; 107.2; ‘Recycling a glass measure’ 125.11 ‘English drinking glass 1660-1700’ 91.10 110.2; 125.2; 127.3; Whisky Dispensers and Measures 84.12 ‘Forty years of glass history’ 120.8 JL 8.71, 72-4, 75, 77-8; 9.41 Brooks, John 38.8; 80.2; 102.8; JL 3.16 (with Sue Brain) ‘Tavern tokens’ 127.20-2 Anglo-Dutch glass 4.2-3 An Alarming Accident 117.15 brandy 94.6, 8 ceramics study centre 51.8 Glass Tumblers 115.14 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 9 Brooks, John A 4.105; 5.106; 6.87; 7.96; 8.112 Burniston, Lucy 99.4 123.20 Broughton Castle 88.4 Burns, Robert JL 7.17-18, 26, 27; PP 43, 65 commercial PP 9 Bruce, Audrey 94.4; 99.5 Burrell Collection, Glasgow 62.4; 68.3; 72.10; 87.8 in Rakow collection 30.5; 45.7 Bruce, Wilf 94.4; 98.2, 3, 4; 99.5 Burrows Abbey Glass Collection 19.2 salts PP 86 Brumagen, Regan, with Emily Davis and Aprille Burtles, & Co. PP 77; JL 4.67, 68, 75 plaques 81.5; PP 91 Nace: ‘A century of ’ 139.12-15 Burton, David cameo vases 94.1; CS 4; PP 8-9, 90, 95, 96 Bryan, John, collection 121.8; 126.25; 127.4 ‘Antique sealed bottles’ 138.6-10 American 139.18 Buckingham, George Villiers, 2nd Duke of 116.8; Butler, John, collection 102.7; 108.18 bottle PP 91, 92, 93 129.12, 13-14; 130.17-18, 19; 131.31; Col. 4, 5 Butler, Robin canteen PP 94 see also Greenwich glasshouse; ‘All at sea with ship’s decanters’ 134.6-11 Chinese 104.8; 109.2, 18; 112.7 Vauxhall glasshouses The Book of Wine Antiques 122.10 ivory PP 93, 94; 110.17;111.17 Buckingham Palace 95.5; 120.17 Great British Wine Accessories 121.18-19; 122.10 lecheverel JL 6.55, 60 Buckley, Francis Col. 60-1; butter cooler PP 20 Locke JL 6.54-55, 56, 60, 61, 62 JL 1.5; 4.6, 64; 5.75, 77, 81 butter dishes 135.10 Roman 121.1, 6-7; 130.7 A History of Old English Glass JL 2.49; 5.4 buttons 94.13; 112.14 Dionysian 130.7 Old English Glass 131.6 Byng, Admiral 90.5 cameos 82.2 Old English Glasshouses 98.11-12; 99.8 Byrne, John Andromeda 129.25 Old Furniture 92.2 ‘Reviving 18th century glassmaking techniques’ Gallé lamp 13.1 Buckley, Wilfred JL 1.7 6.2 miniature 66.8 Buckmaster Goblet 74.13; 79.12 Byzantine empire 107.7 Nelson 107.9 Budapest 133.27-8; 135.20-1 Byzantine glass 113.14; 118.10 scent bottles PP 86; 110.13 Buechner, Thomas S. 124.23 swan 110.13 buffet 95.3 Tassies 66.8; 97.6-7; 109.4 buildings, glass in 5.1; 40.6-8; 53.5; 77.6; 82.14 camera, glass 108.10 regulations 88.2-3 C Camm, Florence 108.1 see also architecture Canada 24.4; 31.1; 34.6 Cable, Michael bulb-vases 129.24-5, 27-8 Black Creek Village, Toronto 31.1 Bose D’Antic 97.14; 98.11 bullet-proof glass 110.11 London, Ontario 67.9 ‘The skills of pre-industrial glassmakers’ 26Jy.1 bullion 114.7 Newfoundland 70.4 cage-cups 100.22; 110.5 Bumper glasses 124.14-15 Parks excavation 24.4/ 6 Cains, Thomas 138.17 Bungard, Graham D. publications 19.5; 34.6 105.6-7 ‘Men of glass’ 2.3 candelabra 115.15; 132.14, 15 calcedonio 130.18-19; 131.31; 135.3-4; 136.16 ‘Men of Glass’: ... the De Bongar family’ JL 3.79-86 candlesticks 107.18; 128.22; 132.20-2; 134.30; calligraphy see lettering Burghardt, Matt 140.22 JL 11.83; PP 73 Museum, Ohio 78.7 ‘A brief look at the sugar crusher’ 140.20-2 Apsley Pellat PP 11 Cambridge Glassmakers Ltd. 19.5 Burgoyne, Ian dolphin 101.14 Cambridge Paperweight Circle 46.2 ‘A new Gallery for the Pilkington Collection’ 78.8; 138.17 Camden Works Museum, Bath 22.1; 139.21 Ex. 16 Candlewick 139.18 27.2; 32.7-8; 45.7; 81.5; 82.2; PP 8-9, 4.2; 44.2, 4; PP 89; 106.12; 111.17 canes 88 Burmese glassworks 91.8 glass 8.5; PP 97, 99; 137.8 Artists in Cameo Glass 57.6; 60.3 Burne-Jones, Sir Edward 8.1; 18.1; 66.11; 70.7; 76.3; in knops 135.6-7 The Cameo Glass of Thomas and George Woodall 29.23 see also filigrana glass INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 10 canna a rete 133.20 becomes Higgins Art Gallery and Museum, Chihuly 138.23 Canning Town Glass Works 37.8; 130.5-6 Bedford 133.5; 135.12-16 sculpture 81.3 Cannon Hall Museum, Barnsley 80.6; Ex. 18 GC outings to 3.1; 52.7-8; 93.1, 8-9; 135.20; cleaning 8.6 Cannons palace 104.6 Ex. 8/10, 20 connecting parts 114.15; 115.15 Canosa Bowl 126.14, 15 guidebook 43.8 Czech 29.1 Capillaire 75.13; 77.3; 98.9 opening 2.3 Doddington 94.4 Captain Glasses 27.2; JL 9.11 celeries / celery glasses 101.14; 114.1, 8-10, 15 electrolier 75.1 car mascots 78.3; 103.19 Celtic style JL 10.50-1 The English Glass Chandelier 86.10 carafes 29.3; PP 65, 70; 109.15; 121.18; 122.10, 11, Central School of Art and Design 128.29; 130.14 The Flame of Liberty 120.14-15 15; 130.12; 134.11; JL 5.86-99; 11.79 Century Glassworks 103.16-17 Hampton Court JL 8.26-37 Collins PP 15 ceramics 104.2-3; 111.8 Mestron, Maastricht 139.2-3 Carboni, Stefano Alloa Pottery 93.12 Newhailes 116.12-13; 117.11 Glass from Islamic Lands 90.10 BM study centre 51.8 Penrose 130.11 (with D. Whitehouse) Glass of the Sultans 87.10 books on 106.4 Philadelphia 120.1, 13 Carder, Frederick 1.2; 2.1; 31.6; 32.8; 33.8; 138.19, clay 104.2, 3; 105.2 -Lustry 89.14 25; 139.17 combined with glass 125.7-9; 128.31; 136.15 restoration 66.5 Carey, Frances conservation 82.9-10 specialist 76.3 Collecting the 20th century 52.4 porcelain 110.10; 136.15-16; 137.4, 26 spiral 138.24 Carnival glass 27.1; 41.1-2; 84.10; 139.16 Ceramics & Glass Circle of Australia 44.4; 46.2 Waterford 127.3; 131.4 Carnival Glass 19.6 Chagall, Marc 8.1; 60.2 Chandos, 1st Duke of 104.6 Carnival Glass News & Views 27.2 chalice vase 110.5 Chantilly 128.3; 132.3 Carter, Mary 101.7 chalk glass 93.2; 115.5 Charlemagne 104.1, 14; 105.11 Cartony, Joseph JL 11.45-8, 61, 70-5 chamber-pots 58.6; 128.27 Charleroi Museum 83.8/14 cartoons 35.10; 64.6; 68.13; 117.4, 6 Chamberlain, D.W. 105.4 Charles, HRH Prince 77.2 stained glass 137.27 Chambers, Karen S., and Tina Oldknow Charles I, King 74.7; 75.9; 81.10; 82.4-5; Ex. 15 see also DIM and BRI Clearly Inspired 90.8 portrait 112.13 cartouche 111.17 Chambon, Raymond 104.9; 113.3-5 Charles II, King 68.11; 81.10; 99.8; 115.3; Casciani, Paul 46.4 L’Histoire du Verre en Belge 101.2 120.13; 129.13-14; 138.10 JL 7.32-9 champagne 59.6; 94.6, 8; 99.8 portraits 90.4; 112.13; 113.5-6; 117.10 cases for glassware 114.11 The History of Champagne 99.8 Charles Edward Stuart, Prince 68.11; 74.5; 75.9; carrying JL 9.14 champagne glasses 11.80 79.5; 87.8; 102.7; 105.1; Col. 1, 3 Castle Howard 65.9; 80.6; Ex. 18 DJ 44, 48; JL 2.26, 33; PP64 portraits 64.7; 71.2; 72.10; 81.10; 88.9; 90.4; Catalogue Colinet 93.13; 94.2, 3 and ale JL 2.8, 9, 29, 31, 36 93.8; Ex. 20; 110.16 catalogues collection 38.2 Chance, Sir Hugh 109.10, 11 Bonnie Prince Charlie and the making of a myth cathedral glass 107.8 death 19.3-4 91.8 Cathedrals 8.1; 44.1-2; 93.12; 94.4; 103.9; 104.14; , Smethwick 109.10-11; 114.6; Charleston, Robert J.L. 30.1; 36.1; 39.1; 42.1-2; 108.9; 124.13 Col. 18, 38, 40; 53.1; 101.2; 132.13; 140.2, 8, 30; Catherine, Empress of Russia 97.6 Chance Expressions 117.14-15 DJ 14, 17 caviar cooler 125.25; 137.3 chandeliers 35.4; 77.3; 85.9; 132.14; JL 11.85 ‘Amen glasses’ 12.2-3; JL 5.4-14 Cecil, William (Lord Burghley) Col. 5 Bath Assembly Rooms 57.4-5 curator Col. 7, 13, 15, 22, 28, 29, 32 47, 49, 51, Cecil Higgins Art Gallery, Bedford 49.6; 89.9; Blair Castle 79.6 52, 54 Col. 41-7 Brighton 133.29 death and tributes 61.1-5; Ex. 13 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 11 ‘Decoration of Glass’ JL 3.16-39 Cheltenham Museum 81.9 Cinzano Glass Collection 6.1; 8.1; 14.4; 64.8 acid-etching JL 3.31-9 Chelyabinsk 113.13 Circle of Glass Collectors 11.1; 110.2; 111.2; printing JL 3.16-30 cheroot holders PP 87 Col. v; DJ 13-14; JL 6.4-5; SR vii-viii ‘Dutch Decoration of English Glass’ 92.3 Chertsey Museum 19.5 antecedents JL 1.4-6 ‘Enamelling and gilding on glass’ JL 1.18-32 Chesshyre family 139.19 1962 exh. catalogue 22.5; 25.4 ‘England and Venice in the 17th century’ 17.3-4 Chester 140.12 origins DJ 13-14; JL 1.7-9 English Glass 92.2, 6; 132.24 Chesterfield, Earl of Col. 5 papers DJ 15, 37 ‘ – an English “first”?’ JL 7.32-9 chevron beads 132.10, 11; 133.4 see also Glass Circle ‘The Glass Circle’ JL 6.4-5 Chichester Cathedral 8.1 City Livery Companies 102.6-7 glass collection 42.1, 2; 59.2, 4 Chiddingfold 74.9; 90.2 claret 94.6, 8 ‘Glass in Medieval England’ 11.4 Chihuly, Dale 105.10; 108.11; 120.14-15; 136.22; claret jugs 91.7; 93.14; 121.19; 129.4, 31;135.10-11; ‘Glass in Safavid Persia’ 7.2 JL 8.89 DJ 49; PP 18, 21, 52, 55, 56, 57, 62 ‘Glasses for the Dessert’ 15.4; JL 5.27-32; 128.16 chandelier 138.23 by Dresser PP 31 ‘A glassmaker’s bankruptcy sale’ JL 2.4-16 sculpture 81.3 engraved 88.10 Masterpieces of Glass 17.2; 92.6 Chinese art JL 4.23-4 by Harry Kny 136.18-19 memories of JL 8.9-17 Chinese glass 7.3; 23.4; 93.1, 12; 132.23; SR 60-2 silver-mounted 91.1/6 ‘Millefiori and filigree’ 8.5 beads 132.9, 23 stopper SR 30, 31 ‘A new look at the Beilbys’ 33.3-4 bowls SR 60 zoomorphic 80.6; 91.7; Ex. 18 ‘Possets, syllabubs and their vessels’ 20.3; at Bristol 19.2-3 Clarke, Brian 56.9 JL .57, 62-3 cameo vases 104.8; 109.2, 18; 112.7 Clarke, Harry 47.6; 94.13 President of GC 1.1; Ex. 1 reverse 108.17; 112.6 Clavell’s glasshouse 16.3; 43.10 presentation goblet 40.1; 42.3; 61.2; Ex. 13; SR 66 Clayton Bros. 124.3; 132.6 JL 6.68-72 scent/snuff bottles 114.16 Clegg, Tessa 76.2 ‘Some English glass-engravers: late 18th-early Chinese glassworking 64.1-2 Clements, Hamilton, collection 131.6; 132.4, 20 19th century’ JL 4.4-19 Chinese porcelain 110.10; 136.15-16; 137.4, 26 Cliffton, William 138.9-10 ‘Taste and technique’ 33.1-2 Chinoiserie Col. 62; DJ 47 Clinton, De Witt SR 46 ‘William and Thomas Beilby as drawing masters’ Christ Church, Oxford 61.9 clocks JL 6.20-31 Christiansen, Hans JL 7.56 glass 27.6 Charlesworth, Dorothy Christie’s Col. 15, 29, 46, 54 mystery 87.14 ‘Glass in Roman Britain’ 2.4 sale, 1986 36.2 water 27.6 Charlotte, Princess PP 11; SR 51 Christmas 109.1, 15 clubs and their glassware 75.10; 114.11; 101.11; Charnock, Thomas 90.1 decorations 93.1; 127.3; SR 32, 63 122.10; JL 9.7-27 Chatfield, Raymond Chrysler Museum, USA 59.8 Beggars Benison 63.8; 68.11; 82.4; 83.9; 90.7-8; collection 96.7 church, glass 5.1 99.7 ‘Glass musical instruments’ 85.3 church windows 109.11 Bloembollenglazenclub 105.5 ‘Writing on glass’ 92.13 see also stained glass ‘Clubs & their glass in the eighteenth century’ Chatsworth 64.7; 66.9 Churchill, Arthur 69.5, 6; 95.14; 93.14; JL 9.7-27 Cheek, Martin Col. 15, 19, 20, 52; Ex. 12, 13; JL 1.7, 8 ‘Clubs and their glasses’ 75.10 Design sourcebook 78.12 cider glasses DJ 44 decanter 114.11 Chelmsford and Essex Museum 6.2; 7.5; 70.5; 73.2 cigarette / cheroot holders 72.1 Dutch 114.11; JL 9.14 Chelsea glasshouse 134.35; 137.4 Cigler, Václav 124.10-11 Orange 11.3; 90.4; 120.13, 14 Chelsea Physic Garden 7.2-3 cinerary urns 133.8 form and structure JL 9.8-15 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 12 hunting 101.11 ‘Simon L. Whistler an appreciation’ 103.5-6 Steuben 32.8 see also Tarporley Hunt Club collars DJ 44, 45 see also Amberina; blue glass; Bristol blue; initiation JL 9.11 collecting 5.1; 53.2; 95.4; 96.7; 98.2; 129.2; 133.3 Burmese glass; copper red; Moser 30.6 JL 6.6-7, 8 ; Peach Blow; red; ruby glass; National American Glass 105.18; 112.2; ale glasses 124.6-8 120.13-15; 124.9 claret jugs 129.31 Colours of Murano in the XIX Century, The 97.9 The Rose and Crown 81.10 Collecting Contemporary Glass 139.22-3 Combe, William JL 7.4, 6-7 Scottish 114.11 Cottle on 130.3-4 commemorative 64.9; 69.11; 80.1; sex clubs 90.7-8 Giles on 131.7-11 99.7; 102.4; 109.9; 113.12; 114.17; 132.7; Sober Club 19.4 Golding on 29.6-8 JL 9.69-70, 75; PP 39; SR 43 ‘La Table Ronde’ 120.17-18; 122.10, 11 McConnell on CS 4-6 Queen Anne 134.31 Whin 114.11 sale legislation 139.4 Australian 108.8 Wig 83.9-10; 90.7-8 van Rossum on 133.7-11 Robert Burns PP 43, 65 see also Jacobite Clubs; Kit-Cat Club 68.2-3 Congress of Berlin PP 38 coal 2.3; 87.3; 100.16; 111.15; JL 7.6; 10.7-12 Collectomania exh. 102.18 coronations 92.11; 108.8; 109.12; 124.18 coal mines, disasters PP 35 Collector, The 74.6 GC flute 39.3 coal wagon, glass collectors Col. v Gladstone, William Ewart PP 39 coasters 121.18; DJ 49 Collectors Guide 67.8 glasshouses 42.3-4 Coathupe, Charles Thornton 100.16-17; 101.8; College glass JL 9.23 Greener’s JL 10.46 102.10 College of Arms 96.8 Hanoverian 109.12, 13; 110.16; 124.18 coats of arms see armorial glasses Collins, William PP 14; 103.13-14; 104.7; 99.4; JL hunting 65.12, 13; 68.12; 81.12; 85.4; 115.15; cobalt 50.4 4.9 122.15 Cobbe Loving Cup 7.40-4, 46, 47, 48, 49, 47 Cologne 102.2; 103.8, 9; 104.13-14; 125.18-19 Confederate Hunt 57.9; 85.4; 87.9 Coccoris, Patricia Coloroll 39.5; 44.2; 48.2 Irish 10.1; 11.3; 68.12; 69.10 ‘The curious history of the bulb vase’ 129.24-5, colour twist stems DJ 46 Jubilees 2.1-2; PP 37, 41, 42 27-8 colours and coloured glass 64.7; 81.5; 96.11; Liberty 63.2 cocktail glass SR 29 106.12; 107.8; 136.11, 17; local tradesmen 94.4 coffee houses 112.5 DJ 43, 45, 46, 51, 52, 53; Lowth 108.9 Coffey, Yvonne JL 2.6, 9; 10.37-9; Millennium 82.2 Glass Jewellery 122.22 SR x, xii, 5 Peter Morgan 105.18 coin glassware 46.2; 63.1; 81.12; 107.18; 109.8; 74.6 Moses Montefiore PP 43 114.17; 118.18; 121.3, 4; 122.23; 131.18; cullet 119.15 Napoleonic Wars 80.4 Col. 10, 27, 43, 44, 41; DJ 44; SR 12 for enamels 107.8; 110.4 19 and 20c. 42.3-5; JL 7.15-31 Colborne, Nicholas 138.10 flashed JL 7.32-9 George Peabody PP 38-9 Colchester 23.1; 70.7; 97.3 flint glass 93.7 political 62.5 Cole, Sir Henry 26Jy.2-3 Kingfisher SR 2 from Pugh JL 2.39 Coleman, Katherine 71.1; 95.5; 113.13; 130.28; Lorraine Glass 107.14; 108.9 Royal 7.18-19; SR 49-54 131.27; 136.23; 137.27 pink glass 106.11 Royal weddings 72.10; 82.5; 106.16; 113.1; ‘Dan Klein: a celebration’ 123.2 purple 78.3/7; Col. 29; PP 38, 72 126.26-7; PP 40, 42, 43 ‘Peter Dreiser M.B.E.’ 107.10-11 recipes JL 2.9; 7.32 Stiegel 65.10; 66.7 ‘A Sideways look at contemporary British glass shaded PP 82, 83 Thwaite Colliery SR 43 engraving’ 108.12-14 ‘slag’ 139.18 Trafalgar 105.1, 11 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 13 transport SR 45-7 Monteiths 94.8-9; 95.11; 96.3; 131.3-4 Emile Gallé ˗ Dreams into glass 29.2 Union of Parliaments 69.9; 71.9; 101.6 for wine 121.18 Frank Brangwyn (DVD) 125.27 Watford 131.22 for wine glasses 53.8; 56.2-4; 58.6-7; 59.6; 86.4; 32.8; 33.8 see also disasters; Jacobite glasses; Kit-Kat Club; 122.17 Glass Beads 132.28-9 portraits; privateers; souvenirs; Copeland, Peter F. and John H. Martin Glass of the Alchemists 116.10, 14-15; 117.3 Williamite glasses Story of Glass Colouring Book 113.15 guide 87.10/12 Communion chalices 75.9 Copeland, W. T. JL 10.47-9, 54-5 Innovations in Glass 113.15 Company of Glass Sellers see Glass Sellers Company Copeland Vase 90.14; PP 44, 45, 46, 47-8 Islamic Glass 123.20; 124.20 Complete Copier 129.28 JL 10.48-9, 52-3, 54-5, 60, 66 Medieval Glass 123.20; 124.20 comport PP 68 Copenhagen 108.11 Reflecting Antiquity 115.13 compote PP 69 Copier, A.D. 130.23; JL 7.58, 66 see also Journal of Glass Studies composite glass objects 131.25-6 Complete Copier 129.28 Rakows and 30.5 computers 67.7; 70.4/13; 83.2; 88.13 copper red JL 7.32; 9.41-58; 10.39-40 Sasanian glass 106.6 C. A. D. 53.2 chemistry J9.44 and Steuben 32.8; 33.8 laser technology 85.10 cordial glasses 53.3; 97.8; 98.9; 101.11; 114.17-18 cornucopia DJ 49 Conne, Augustin 4.9 DJ 42, 44; Ex. 9; SR 21, 23 Cornwallis, Charles, 1st Marquis 121.3 Connor, R.D. and A.D.C.Simpson ‘Captain’ 27.2; JL 9.11 Coronation Goblet 111.10 Weights and Measures in Scotland 102.11-12 Cork 46.2; 91.1, 12; 101.6, 7, 8 Corporations 9.23; JL 9.9 conservation 17.3; 31.3-4; 56.56/9; 72.7 Cork Glass Company JL 9.23 Corsham Court 83.5; 87.8 Conservation of glass 51.2 corkscrews 121.18 Cosecure 50.3 The Conservation of Glass and Ceramics 82.9-10 Cormack, Peter Costantini, Vittorio 124.21 medieval glass 31.3-4 Arts and Crafts Stained Glass 138.27-9 Cottage Glass Works 42.4 see also restoration ‘Stained glass and the Arts and Crafts Movement’ Cottle, Simon 83.7; 112.4 Constable Glass 61.10. 11; 96.6; 98.8; 101.10-11 129.23-4 ‘Albert Hartshorne’ 124.16-18 Constable Maxwell collection 10.2; 12.4; 14.1; 19.4; Corning, Sunderland 4.6 ‘Beilby ’ 127.6-11 20.1; 24.2; 25.4; 39.6; 48.6; 50.6; 100.22 Corning Glass Works, New State 138.25; ‘The Beilby Goblet’ 106.2-3 contemporary glass 70.2; 114.12-13 139.12-15, 16 Chairman of GC Ex. 1-2 British engraving 108.12-14 (CMOG), New York 38.2; ‘Fragile diplomacy’ 135.22-4 Collecting Contemporary Glass 139.22-3 73.9-10; 75.2; 76.2; 77.8; 87.1, 2; 104.8; ‘German Baroque glass’ 136.12-14 Contemporary Glass Society 70.4; 99.14; 124.9; 110.7; 125.19; 132.15 ‘Glass at auction 1990-2004’ CS 21-3 126.27; 130.15 Annual Reports 75.13; 76.2; 79.9; 92.8, 11; 95.2 ‘Glittering prizes’ 132.25-6 Cook Cup 89.9 Fellows 101.5 ‘Introduction’ PP 5-9 Cooke, Frederick Emile Gallé exh. 28.3-4 ‘The Jewels in the Crown’ (House of Hanover) Glass: Twentieth Century design 38.6 glass furniture 108.7; 110.15 105.1, 12 Cooke, Thomas 138.10 library 30.5; 100.2 ‘A look at Irish glass’ 91.11-12 Cookson, John 61.11 new building, 1977 3.1 ‘The Other Beilbys’ 36.6 JL 5.76-7, 78-9, 80 opened 15.1 ed. Sotheby’s Concise Encyclopaedia of Glass Conne, Augustin JL 4.9 new gallery, 2014 137.26-7 74.12 Cookworthy, William 50.4 publications 17.2 ‘William Beilby and the art of glass’ 74.5-6; coolers Beyond Venice 100.12; 104.9-10 JL 9.29-40 butter PP 20 Chemical Analyses of Early Glass 132.27-8 Country Houses 105.8-9 caviar 125.25 Collecting Contemporary Glass 139.22-3 Country Life 80.6; 98.5; 99.9; Ex. 18 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 14 Coventry Canal Company PP 33 The Drunkard’s Children 117.6, 7 cylinder glass 46.1 19.6; 25.2 crystal 140.5-6 Czech glass 29.1-2; 108.10; 116.6-7, 15 Cowdy, Vernon 140.19 Crystal Cutters Union 8.5 Václav Cigler 124.10-11 ‘Hexactinellida: glass sponges’ 140.15-19 Crystal Palace 46.1 1945-1980 exh. 113.7; 116.6 Crabtree, Christopher, collection 121.20; 122.4-5; see also Great Exhibitions Czech Republic 105.5; 106.15; 119.10-11; 28.13 123.18 cucumber straightener PP 60, 61 GC visits 117.2, 9; 119.8-9 crackle glass 120.15 cullet 64.11; 113.10-11; 114.6-7; 116.11-12; Kamenický Šenov 90.12-13 Crafts 75.13 118.12 Czechoslovakia 29.1-2; 43.4-6; 70.2, 3; 74.12; Crafts Council 108.13 archaeological finds 20.2 106.15; 116.6; SR xii Cragg, Tony 84.15 bottle banks 13.1 archeological finds 47.6 cranberry glass PP 70, 71, 80, 82, 83, 97, 99 coloured 119.15 A Guide to Czech and Slovak Glass 74.12 Cranch, Graeme recycling 122.9; 131.27 see also Bohemia; Nový Bor collection 71.2; 72.13 seconds 33.8 death 73.15 value to modern bottle-makers 122.9 Crane, Anne Culm Goblet 94.1/12 ‘Crabtree collection sold’ 122.4-5 Cummings, Keith 136.23 D Crane, Walter Col. 10; PP 9, 84, 85 Contemporary Kiln-formed Glass 122.22 da Costa, Jean Baptiste 114.2-4; 116.8, 9; 130.18-19; Crapper, Thomas 90.9 cup and saucer PP 72 131.31; 134.2; 135.3, 4 Crellin, JL K., and JL R. Scott DJ 46 Dagnia family JL 5.75-6 ‘Glass and British pharmacy 1600-1900’ Curle, A. O. Col. 19-22 Daily Telegraph 70.3; 71.2; 78.3 JL 1.33-45 Curran 110.18 Dalemain 105.9 Crichton, Alexander 80.6; Ex. 18 cuspidors 128.28 Dalton, Thomas 86.8 crisseling / crizzelling 75.2; 92.3; 94.5; custard glasses JL 5.38, 56; 11.82 Dancer, John Benjamin 125.4-6 129.13, 14-15; 130.19, 20; 131.31; 135.13; Customs 98.11 Danish glass 108.11 Col. 15, 28 cut glass Col. 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,15, 33, 34, 57, 59; Royal 68.6; 72.10; 82.5 treatment 78.11 SR xi, 40-3 Darduin, Giovanni cristallo 75.2; 107.15; 126.18-19; 130.18-19; American Brilliant-cut 60.6; 116.7; 138.19 Il Ricettario Darduin 49.5 137.24; JL 6.8; SR 10, 11 British Darenth bowl 110.8 Crossley, David 18c. 100.8-9; 19c. 96.9; 100.10; 20c. 95.14; Darmstadt JL 7.56-7 ‘The excavation of Sir William Clavell’s 99.12-13 Darnell Glass Service 109.9 glasshouse’ 16.3 cutting glass 106.13; 112.11l; 132.20-2; Dartford Borough Museum 110.8 Crowe, Kate DJ 30, 45, 47, 49, 50, 51, 52 49.4; 74.7; 78.7; Ex. 15; 126.26 ‘The French connection: the decorative glass of cost 111.10-11 Dashwood, Sir Francis 9.15-18 James A. Jobling and Co. of Sunderland during glyptic 136.13 JL dating and classifying glass 3.5; 82.2-3/14; 84.9; the 1930s’ 34.1-2; JL 6.32-45 high- 136.12-14 96.9, 10, 11 crown, glass SR 29 hobnail 135.11 Bacon DJ 27, 33-4 crown on cushion, glass jar PP 37 Cutler, Vanessa balusters 119.11 62.3; 106.11; 108.1; 114.6, 7 New Technologies in Glass 130.27 filigree glasses Crown Window Glass 62.3 cutlery handles 90.4 133.16-21 Jacobite glass 64.6, 7 cruets 97.11; 115.10-11, 12-13; 131.25; Cycle Club 61.7; 87.9; 111.7-8; 118.7-8 ; JL 9.16, 65 system 115.2 Col. 6; SR 8 rota JL 9.8 vetro a retortoli 133.16-21 Cruikshank, George cyder glasses 87.8; 110.16; 124.6; 126.4 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 15 Daugherty, Dorothy Cadogan, JL 13.4 Parkington, Michael Wroughton 60.2 Celery Vases 114.15 Chance, Sir Hugh 19.3-4 Parkington, Mrs M. W. 71.13 brothers 110.13; 126.5 Charleston, Joan 58.8 Peel, Mrs H.F. 3.1 Davenport 86.4 Charleston, Robert JL 61.1-5; Ex. 13 Perret, JL Bernard 40.3 glasses 124.14; 125.22 Clarke, Tim H. 63. Addendum; 64.3 Phillips, Howard 68.3; 69.5-6; Ex. 12-13 jug 125.17 Constable-Maxwell, Andrew 48.6 Plesch, Peter Hariolf 132.30 ‘Patent’ glass 104.18 Cranch, Arthur Graeme 73.15 Polak, Ada 125.12 Davenport, John PP 83; 135.9 Crouch, A. G. (Molly) 7.4 Poulson, Michael 70.10 Davidson, George PP 78, 79 Davis, Derek Cecil 61.8 Rakow, Juliette K. 56.8 Davidson, Sandra Dreier, F. A. 85.5 Rakow, Leonard S. JL 6.59 ‘Conservation and restoration of glass vessels’ Dudding,K. JL 74.10 Richards, Barry 51.6; 52.3 17.3 Eagle, Anita 62.4 Rider, Denis 3.3 ‘Repair and restoration of glass objects’ Emanuel, Richard 112.3 Rimmer, Norman 17.4 108.14-15 Eveson, Stanley Reginald 99.5 Rose, Jeffrey. 3.3, 7 (with R. Newton) Conservation of glass 51.2 Fox, Henry 115.7 Russell, Gordon 3.3; 4.3-4; 5.4 Davies, Iestin 43.9 Gardner, Paul 60.2 Sampson, E.110.2, 3 Davis, Bill Gros, Eugene 53.6 Seddon, Laura 66.11 collection 126.11-13; 132.13 Gros, Gabriella 30.1; 31.5 Sheppard, Christopher 137.27; 138.4 ‘Three engraved glasses’ 126.11-13 Haden, H Jack 105.4 Smit, Frans 82.6 ‘An unrecorded Sang baluster’ 130.8-10 Hadfield, John 81.7 Spillman, Don 78.7 Davis, Emily with Regan Brumagen and Aprille Nace Harden, Donald B. 59.7 Stennett-Wilson, Ronald 122.18-19 ‘A century of Pyrex’ 139.12-15 Hawkins, Philip 90.5 Stephenson, Dr Harwood 82.7 Davis, Frank Homer, John 54.5 Stephenson, Mrs Harwood 76.3 Continental Glass 92.3-4 Ingham, R.H. 74.10 Stout, Tony 76.3 Dawson, Aileen Kelsall, Keith 68.4 Stuart, Dr David 74.10 ‘English glass in the British Museum’ Col. 1-7 Kersely, Jonathon 82.7 Tait, Audrey 115.6 Dawson Scott collection 65.12 Kiddell, A.JL B. 14.4 Tait, Gerald Hugh 103.2, 3-5, 8; 104.4-5 Day, Ivan Klein, Dan 120.3 Thompson, J M; 105.4 ‘Syllabubs and jellies’ 128.16-20 Kneafsey, JL P. 14.4 Toller, Paul 3.3 De Bongard, Pierre and Jean 2.3 Lazarus, Peter 14.3 Towse, John 105.4 De Bongar family JL 3.79-86 Lipofsky, Marvin 140.31 Turner, Prof. W.E. 20.4 Dealers Stock 108.17 Lloyd, Ward 137.27 Udall, Mrs E.T. 80.3 death notifications, appreciations and obituaries Manley, Cyril 62.3 Wakefield, Hugh 28.4 Aron, Cyril 14.4 Maxwell, Andrew Constable 48.6 Watts, David 39.1, 29-31 Barbirolli, Lady Evelyn 114.5 Maxwell, Herbert William 10.2 Watts, Rosemary 94.4 Barnfather, Don 57.6 McDougal Dr Ian 69.6 Webster, Jane 137.27 Baxter, Geoffrey 65.3 McKearin, Helen 43.3 Weedon, Cyril E. 56.7 Bell, Phyllis 53.6 Miller, George 74.10 de Wesselaw, C. P. C. 25.4 Boydell, Brian 85.5 Murray, Dr Sheilagh 29.3 Whatmore, Philip 44.10; Ex. 7 Boydell, Mary 125.12 Newgas, Eveline 138.31 Whistler, Sir Laurence 86.5 Buechner, Thomas S. 124.23 Newton, Prof. Ronald Gordon 97.5 Whistler, Simon L. 103.2, 5-6, 8 Burne, W.T.G. (Tommy) 45.3 Norris, Rev. Father Charles 100.19 Wilkes, Robert 109.10 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 16 Williams, Nigel 54.12 with spiral stoppers 111.18 pyramids 102.7; 104.7 Williams-Thomas, R. S. 48.7; 49.8 zoomorphic 80.6; Ex. 18 see also epergnes; jelly glasses; posset pots; Wilmot, Derek G.U. de B. 86.5 deceptive bowl DJ 44 sweetmeat dishes; syllabub glasses Wilson, Kenneth M. 103.2, 7, 8 decoration of glass Dettmers, Otto, collection 80.2; 82.3, 4 Woodward, H. W. 80.3 acid-etching JL 3.31-9 D’Humy, P. R. de F. JL 7.54-5 Worsley, Katharine 53.6; Ex. 11 enamelling JL 1.18-21 diadem SR 3 Wright, Peter 95.5 gilding JL 1.21-4 Dickens, Charles 109.10, 11; 131.26; JL 1.35, 36 decanters 100.1, 3, 4, 11; 113.12; 121.18; 122.11; Oriental 123.12-13 Dictionarium Polygraphicum JL 1.22 135.11; printing JL 3.16-30 Digby, Sir Kenelm 112.5; JL 5.57, 59, 61, 62, 65, 81 Col. 26, 27, 28, 31, 42-5, 47, 52; DJ 31, 32; Decorative Arts Society 55.8 Closet newly Opened 128.18 JL 2.8; 9.12; 11.78; Defoe, Daniel 69.9; 92.2; 94.8 Dillon, Edward PP 51, 56, 62, 64, 65, 66-7, 80, 82; SR 36, 38 Defries family 110.3 Glass JL 1.7, 8 Aristocrat 108.10 Delomosne & Son 50.2; Dillon, Patrick Bacchus PP 24 Col. 13, 14, 15, 22, 34-6, 37, 43, 47 GIN 117.3 BEER 131.19, 20 booklet on Lynn glasses 65.5; 101.33 Glass 118.9 bellows-shaped 108.11 exhs. 32.3; 35.4; 83.4; 105.17; 108.1, 18 DIM and BRI cartoons 64.6, 11; 65.7; 66.7; 67.8; Bismarck 127.27 English tumblers, 1750-1830 115.14-15 68.8; 69.8; 70.10; 71.7; 72.14; 73.7; 74.4; Blackett 106.3 Seton Veitch collection 109.12 75.10; 77.5; 78.5; 81.7; 82.12; 83.12; 84.7; cased 111.17 Strength and Chearfulness 74.2; 101.11 85.11; 86.11; 87.5; 88.5; 89.8; 101.11; 104.11; Club 114.11 glasses 128.23; 129.5 CS 7; Ex. 14 Collecting Decanters 19.5 demicrystal SR xii disasters, glass commemorating 4.6; 42.4; 102.8; cruciform DJ 49 Denison-Pender 109.4 117.11, 15; JL 7.16; PP 35; SR 44, 49 The Decanter 136.23 Denmark 37.8; 68.6; 82.4, 5; 108.11 Dobbins, Norm and Ruth effect 128.2 Dennis, Richard 81.2 Etched glass, techniques and designs 84.11 exh. at Rye 109.3-4 Dennis Hall Crystal 52.9 Doddington Hall 94.4 frames 115.10, 11, 18 Depression Glass 102.18; 139.17 Dodsworth, Christopher 62.2-3; 76.7 human figures 112.9 Derbyshire, John PP 32-3, 74-5, 79 Dodsworth, Roger 95.9; 99.4 Ide family 109.8 JL 4.67-8, 80, 81, 82, 83 British glass between the wars 38.5 Irish 101.6-8 design 45.3; 63.3 ‘Designer cut glass from Stourbridge’ 99.12-13 Isoaiti 108.11 The Bases of Design 70.12 ‘ ’ 72.4 Kit-Cat Club 94.14 C.A.D. 53.2 Glass and Glassmaking 22.6 Lynn DJ 48 19c. 96.2 ‘EnglishMancheste paperweightsr glass’ 14.3 ˗ 1848 magnum 103.14; 106.17 20c. 38.6 ‘The Manchester glass industry’ JL 4.64-83 Masonic 129.11 Design Book 4.4-5 ‘New glass displays at Broadfield House’ 80.4 mould-blown 112.2 Design Registration 84.3; 85.13-14 ‘Rare decorated vase returns home’ 123.12-13 musical 81.8; 93.12 Dessao Goblet 136.12 ‘Survival or revival: historicism in English glass’ opaline PP 75 dessert presentation 104.7; 110.9; 112.5-6; 128.16- 66.4-5 ‘Prince of Wales’ 135.9 20, 21; JL 2.9 Doerfel, Guenter and Elke Gelfort 1760-1930 94.10 glasses JL 5.27-56 ‘Uranium glasses’ JL 11.91-102 ship’s 101.4-7; 134.6-11; SR 2 settings JL 5.33-4 dogs, glass PP 79; 99.11; travelling set 72.10 vessels 15.4; 20.3; 94.4; 107.14; 110.9, 10; SR 30, 31, 32, 61 ‘Under the Rose’ JL 9.13 117.10-11; 133.12; 135.9 Dolan, Nicholas S. 99.4 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 17 ‘The Century Glassworks’ 103.16-17 Dreweatt Neate Durrington Collection 80.4; 82.4; 83.5; 109.8; ‘Two views on press-moulded glass CS 12-13 auctions 104.17; 106.16, 17; 108.17 125.10; 139.5-7 domestic glass industry 86.14; 113.12 drinking glasses 54.12; 80.4 Düsseldorf 103.8, 9; 104.13, 14 Donino da Zara 107.7 Bumpers JL 9.13 Dutch clubs 114.11; JL 9.14 door stop SR 30 18c. 36.6; 38.6; 73.4; 92.2, 3; 101.1; 104.6-7; Dutch glass 64.6; 129.3; 130.22; 136.22; JL 8.77-83 Dorflinger 43.3 109.12; 124.23;137.18-21 Anglo-Dutch glasses in the British Museum 4.2-3 Dorigato, Attilia The Golden Age of English Glass 126.25; 127.3; ‘Dutch Decoration of English Glass’ 92.3 (et al) The Colours of Murano in the XIX Century 128.8, 9; 128.27; 135.6 engraving 4.2, 3; 92.4; 137.18-21 97.9 size JL 9.12-13 Bradford collection 26A.4; 32.5; 34.2; 37.3 Murano: Island of Glass 98.13 history 120.8, 9 calligraphic 92.13 Dorner, Jane press-moulded 138.18 stipple 8.2; 28.1; 32.3; 55.3; 67.8; 93.14 ‘Deadly glass’ 123.8-9 1660-1700 91.10 Uniquely Dutch 18th cent. stipple-engravings editor 122.1 [editorials 122-140] smashing 57.8-9; JL 9.13 on Glass 55.3; 57.8; 67.8; 126.11, 12 ‘From bubble to bowl’ 107.12-13 State 96.8 Newcastle balusters 126.11; 127.6, 9; 130.6 on 105.3 in table settings 140.3 square bottles 114.7; 117.6 ‘SHIFT – stretching the medium’ 117.12 use 110.9-10 Dutch portraits 112.13 Dossie, Robert see also wine glasses Dutch toast 125.3 Handmaid to the Arts 114.14; 130.17; 134.3 drinking habits 53.3/7; 69.13; 86.3; Ex. 9; 133.17-18 Orange Order 120.13, 14 double-bowl glass 112.15 drinking horn 104.8 duty on glass see taxation double-dip moulding 128.22 drinking scenes, painted see Dyball, Ann PP 73 double glazing 77.6; 88.2-3; 107.18 Drom perfumes 54.3 Dynasty Crystal 73.3-4 dragon goblets 125.27 Drummond family 94.9 Dyottville Glass Works 137.6-9 dragons 101.10 glass bill 92.12 dram glasses 124.14-15; Drunkard’s Arms 73.8, 9; 74.4 SR 30, 31, 32, 61 Drury, Elizabeth Drambuie Collection 62.5; 65.9; 74.4; 89.9; 104.14; Antiques 36.6 E 106.17; 112.13; 128.4 Dublin 50.6; 51.4; 69.10; 71.11; 85.1; Ex. 19; 137.26 eagle bottle 136.2 book on 64.8 GC visit 63.7 ear rings SR 32 GC visit 105.14 glasshouses JL 2.37-49; 7.50-2 ear trumpet SR 69 Drausch, Valentin JL 6.9, 15 Dudley 8.2; 44.9; 48.4, 7 Earsdon church 102.8 drawn trumpet DJ 43, 44, 45, 46, 47 Art Gallery 12.5, 6 East India Company 134.24-5 Dreier, Franz-Adrian Council 75.2; 101.3; 118.3/13; 139.2, 20-1 eating and drinking 80.4 ‘Glass imitating rock crystal and precious stones Crystal Festivals 44.9; 51.7; 52.9 100.13 – 16th and 17th century wheel engraving Glass Festivals 69.7 75.2; 81.4 Elegant Eating glass eaters 129.17, 18; 130.5 and gold ruby glass’ JL 6.8-19 glassmakers 96.12-13 see also dessert; drinking glasses; drinking habits Dreiser, Peter 8.2; 71.1; 107.10-11; 108.12 see also Brierley Hill Ebbott, Rex death 85.5 Dudmaston Glass 98.8; 101.10-11; 109.12 British glass of the 17th and 18th centuries 5.4 (with J. Matcham) Glass Engraving 22.4 Dumfries Edinburgh 13.2 ‘The Whittington Loving Cup’ JL 6.68-72; 7.19 House 116.13 Castle SR 46 Dresman, Ruth 108.13 Museum 76.4 clubs 114.11 Dresser, Christopher 83.13; PP 9, 31; JL 7.55 dumps PP 60, 61 Georgian House 63.9 dresses, glass 87.3 Durand 139.17 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 18 glass 109.4 2002 96.12-13 provincial 75.3-4 Huntley House museum 13.2; 63.9; 109.4 Elwell’s Luxury Glass 55.8 workshop 106.2 Pollock House Museum 13.3; 60.3 Ely Cathedral 13.2; 64.10 see also Guild of Glass Engravers St Giles Cathedral 108.9 Emanuel, Richard 112.3 engraving on glass DJ 27-8, 29-30; SR 32-8, 40, 44-5 see also Holyrood Flint Glass Works; National emblems 92.13 animals DJ 46; SR 34, 38, 41, 43 (Royal) Museum of Scotland embossing 66.2 Arms of War SR 33 24.5-6; 30.7-8; 48.2; 79.4; enamelled wares 78.1; 86.4; 104.15; Col. 5, 33, 34; Athena SR 32 88.10; 99.2; 100.2; JL 11.1 SR 38-9 Bacchus SR 33 Edinburgh and Leith Flint Glass Company window 104.16; 105.3 birds DJ 44, 46, 48; SR 36, 54, 55 JL 9.26; 11.72 enamelling 108.2; 126.6-10; DJ 52; JL 1.18-21 Bohemian 123.22 reproduction glasses JL 11.7-36 Beilby 106.2-3; 127.6-11; DJ 46; JL 9.31-40 chip Col. 5, 15, 19, 22, 30, 32, 34, 44, 47, 62 Edinburgh Glasshouse Company enamels 107.6-7 coach and four SR 45 pattern-book JL 2.7, 13 colours 107.8; 110.4 contemporary British 108.12-14 education 118.2 heating 110.4 Continental 82.4; 92.4 Edwards, Benjamin 101.6, 7 High-Fire 110.4 diamond-point 92.3, 11; 126.11-12; 128.8, Edwards, Geoffrey opaque 126.20-1 138.26; Col. 12, 39, 52 Art of Glass 79.9 opaque-white 127.8-9 Dresden SR 59 ‘The glass collections of the National Gallery of Encil, David P. drill 107.13 Victoria, Melbourne’ 70.6 Chance Expressions 117.14-15 intaglio drill 108.13 Edwards, Roy Engle, Anita flowers DJ 44, 45, 47, 48, 52; SR 33, 36, 57 ‘The Vauxhall glasshouses’ 35.6-7 From myth to reality 63.5 fruit and vine DJ 43, 44, 46, 47, 48, 52 Egermann, Friedrich 29.1; 94.1; 136.17 Light 41.5 gold 126.14-17 Egerton, Philip 118.7, 8 Readings in glass history 11.5-6; 15.3; 29.2; 43.8 Hochschnitt JL 6.8, 12, 18 egg cups DJ 51; SR 30 English Antique Glass factory 125.27 hops and barley DJ 44, 49 Egypt 131.24; 133.4; SR 7 English cut glass SR xi-xii Irish 101.6-8 Mendes 70.7 English Glass to 1820 exh. DJ 10 Liberty 63.2; 110.16; 111.2; DJ 46 Egyptian glass 59.3-4; 100.17; 128.24-5; 130.7; catalogue DJ 39-55 musical instruments SR 44 131.8; 132.8, 15; JL 8.105; SR 7 English Heritage 120.9 Newcastle Bridge SR 45 Eisch, Erwin 110.7; 129.27; 131.28-9; 134.5 English Table Glass JL 11.7-10 not contemporary 121.2 Eisert, Frank SR 34 engraved glass 8.2; 80.12 ; DJ 46-7 Royal SR 49-54 El Greco 100.15 for Clubs JL 9.7-27 techniques 22.4 Eldon, Earl of, vase presented to 134.12-15 colour DJ 29 text see inscriptions election glasses J9.18-19, 24, 25 ‘Engraved and etched glass’ 131.27 transport SR 45-7 see also ballot bowls 19c. 96.9 tumblers 109.15 electrolier 75.1 see also stipple-engraved glass Four Continents 128.5 Elegant Epergne, The 102.7 engravers 1.1; 81.6; 93.2-3; Ex. 1 verse 104.18 Eliot, T.S. 104.18 Biemann 102.5-6 see also Beilby, Dreiser, Peter; Dutch glass; Elizabeth II, Queen 73.1; 111.1 JL 10.76-89 inscriptions; lettering; portraits; ships; stipple; collection 95.6; Ex. 21 Bohemian 125.21; JL 6.8-19; PP 6-7 wheel engraving Elliott, George 8.1 English, late 18-early 19c. JL 4.4-19 engraving on wood 106.1-2 Ellis, Jason Jacobite JL 3.40-78 engravings on bottle seals 138.9 Glassmakers of Stourbridge and Dudley 1612- London 78.6; 93.2-3 Ennion 138.11-15, 25 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 19 Ensell, George JL 2.4 flask 138.5 Entwhistle, Chris and Liz James ship’s 127.5 New Light on Old Glass 135.26 F trumpet 137.5; 138.3; 139.19 épergnes 64.7; 66.9; 67.9; 69.13; 74.7; Ex. 15; tumblers 126.5; 128.5; 132.7 Faber, Sir Geoffrey 104.18 JL 5.30, 34-5, 44 wine 125.13 Fabergé 104.15; 113.15 The Elegant Epergne 102.7 Patrician 124.4 façon de Venise 68.1; 92.1, 4; 104.7, 8, 9-10, 14; Erdigg Hall 76.1; 105.8-9 toastmaster’s 131.6 122.4-5; 128.30; 130.22; 131.25, 27; 133.31; Erskine family 68.11 Federer, Frances (previously Binnington) 140.8-9; DJ 41; SR xi Earl of Kellie DJ 29 ‘Gold and glass’ 126.14-17 inscribed 92.13 Esveld, Tiny Gold Leaf, Paint & Glass 130.27 portrait flutes 94.12 Glass made transparent 125.26 ‘Reverse painting and gilding on glass’ 112.6-7 factory glass 84.10 Eswarin, Rudy 110.2 feeding cup SR 69 Fairfax House 100.17 ‘Paintings behind glass’ 3.3 Feldmann, JL E. JL 1.33, 37 Fairford Church 42.1 ‘Reverse painting on glass’ JL 4.46-63 Félibien: Des Principes de l’Architecture JL 1.21, 29 fakes 58.5; 69.8; 78.3; 84.2-3; 98.2, 3-4,13; 99.2; étagère PP 49 Feller, John Quentin: Dorflinger 43.3 113.2; 128.4 etching 27.4; 42.3; 53.8; 66.2; 84.1; 106.12; Fenton, Frank 139.16, 18 ancient 130.7; 131.7-8; 132.5-6 107.14; 131.27; DJ 49; JL 3.31-9; PP 7 Fenton Art Glass 102.18 balusters 99.3 Etched glass, techniques and designs 84.11-12 Fereday, J. T. 73.3-4 Catalogue Colinet 93.13; 94.2, 3 Etienne Gallery 130.23 fern-patterns JL 2.39; 5.88 composite 131.25 European Society for Light and Glass 105.5 Festival of Britain 88.2 French 65.7; 125.26 Evans, Godfrey Fieldings 102.17; 103.12; 105.18; 111.16-17 hunting goblet 122.15 ‘The National Museums of Scotland’ Col. 17-24 Fiestaware 117.14-15 Is it genuine? 37.6 Souvenirs 80.7; 92.2 filigrana / filigree glass 8.5; 133.16-21; 134.18-23 Jacobite 60.3; 64.6, 7; ; 70.3; 71.2; Evans, Wendy 69.10-11 Fingask Glass 60.4 88.10 ‘Friggers, whigmalleries and witchballs’ 43.1-2 finger bowls (water glasses) 58.6-7; 68.11, 12; 85.9; paperweights 46.2 ‘Glasses for engraving’ JL 9.75 115.14; 122.17; PP 62, 63, 74 privateer glasses 132.26 ‘Survival or revival: historicism in English glass’ Londonderry PP 16 see also reproduction 66.4-5 at Royal banquets 53.8; 56.2-4; JL 9.23 Falcon glassworks 38.2; 63.3; ‘Whitefriars: a London glassworks’ 19.2 uranium PP 13 Col. 26, 28; 96.8; JL 3.4, 6-8, 11 (et al) Whitefriars glass 67.5 Finnish glass 11.2-3; 60.6; 69.6; 108.11 brick cone glass house JL 8.54-69 Evelyn, John 62.2; 73.5; 111.15; 117.10; Col. 13 fire extinguishers 70.11-12; 95.11 families of ancient lineage 54.9-11 excise see taxation firing glasses 101.11; 118.1; 124.14-15; 129.9-11; Farfa bowl 130.7 ewer and basin sets 128.28 Col. 10; DJ 45 Farquharson, Clyne 45.1, 2 ewers 92.11; 131.25-6; Col. 25, 52 fish Farraday, Michael 47.5 Fatimid rock crystal 117.16 engraved 88.1; SG 73 fashion, 18c. 104.6-7 Fritsche’s JL 4.24, 38 glass 59.3-4; 111.13 ‘favourite glass, My’ Pugh 85.1; Ex. 19 fish bowls 87.8; 90.1, 3; 93.14; DJ 50; SR 66 amphora 133.6 Exeter 74.7; 116.1, 2; Ex. 15 Fisher, Graham baluster 129.5; 140.4 flute 74.7; 112.13; 113.5; Ex. 15 ‘A new home for glass’ 138.20-2 beaker 135.5 eyes, glass 81.3 Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge 8.1; 88.5; 89.9; Bohemian 136.5 91.5; 100.17; 106.8; 114.12-13; 131.16-20; Dionysian cameo vase 130.7 Col. 49-55 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 20 Flared Panel shaker 131.15 Ford, John JL 7.17, 23, 25, 26, 28; PP 57, 65, 67 ‘A reappraisal of eighteenth century Jacobite flashed glass JL 7.32-9 Ford, William JL 10.34-43 glass’ JL 9.71-4 flasks (pocket bottles) 123.7; 124.18, 23; 125.22; forgeries 84.2 Franklin, Benjamin 106.8; 120.14 138.31; Col. 55; SR 6 Forsythe, Ruth A. Franklin, Gaby acid 138.5 Made in Czechoslovakia 70.3 ‘Watford Glass Company’ 131.21-3 from ancient 138.12 Forth Bridge 42.4; JL 7.16, 21; PP 88 Franks, Sir Augustus Wollaston 107.2 Gimmel SR 46 Foster, Felix 92.8/11 Frantze, Susanne K.: Contemporary glass 44.6 Jason head 112.8 Fostoria Glass Co. 139.16, 18 Franzoi, Umbero: Archimede Seguso 52.2 sputum 125.26 Founders’ Company collection 98.1 Fraser, Donald JL 2.17-18 square SR 53 fountains, glass 76.1; 78.12; 110.9 Frauenau 110.7 zoomorphic 80.6; 81.11; Ex. 18 bird PP 98, 99 Frederick, Prince of Wales 82.5; 88.9; 117.6; 120.17- Flavel, Ray 54.1 table fountains 84.13; 86.4 18; 122.10, 11 ‘Old glassmaking techniques’ 29.3-4 wine 128.18 Frederick the Great 82.4 Fleming, Arnold SP 74 Foulds, Diane portraits 90.4-5 flint glass 130.17-19, 20-1; SR xi A Guide to Czech and Slovak Glass 74.12 Freemasonry 47.1; 129.9-11 coloured 93.7; JL 7.32-7 104.3 see also Masonic glasses Edinburgh and Leith Company JL 11.7-36 Fowler, J. T. DJ 12 Freestone, Ian C. glasses 120.9, 15 Fox, Henry 86.5; 94.5, 140.2 ‘Glassmaking after the Romans’ 72.3 in Ireland JL 2.40 on auctions, sales and fairs [regular reports] ‘New light on ’ 135.17-19 Jobling JL 6.34-5 ‘Bright and shiny: the new Glass Gallery at the French, Mrs C.A.L., collection 68.8; Ex. 14 Newcastle 26A.3 Victoria and Albert Museum’ 59.9; Ex. 17 French bottle house 81.1 recipes JL 2.5-6; 10.37-8 Clippings [regular reports] French glass 36.4; 37.5; 11.2; 13.4; 45.8; 55.2 see also cristallo; lead crystal glass ‘Clippings goes North’ 76.8-9; Ex. 16-17 Bose D’Antic 97.14; 98.11 flint glass houses JL 5.75-85; 10.45-6 collection 7.4; 15.2; 55.5; 100.1, 18-19; 101.2; fakes 125.26 ‘flip-flops’ (‘singing glasses’) 137.7 102.14-15; 115.1; 117.18 oil lamps 65.5 19.5; 78.12; 85.2; 111.5; 124.20-1 ‘Glass Clippings’ 74.7; Ex. 15 paperweights 59.1 floral branches, applied PP 90 ‘The history of the Glass Circle’ DJ 13-19 17c. 128.30 Florence 74.3 ‘Making the most of the Manchester Weekend’ Freznel dioptic lenses 109.11 flower decoration 107.5 68.8; Ex. 14 Friendly Societies 134.30 flower holder SR 43 ‘Reminiscences of personal favourites’ 66.3 friggers see whimsies Flower trough SR 63 tributes to 115.7-9 Fritsche, William 1.2; 38.2; PP 59, 62-3 flowers, glass 77.8; 79.7; 80.8; 94.13; 102.7 Foy, Daniel JL 4.24-5, 26, 38, 39, 40, 42 flute glasses 84.9; 104.10; Col. 30, 34; DJ 46 Le verre de L’Antiquite Tardive 64.5 From Palace to Parlour exh. 90.13, 14; 95.5; 97.2; ale 101.11 (with G. Sennequier) Ateliers de verriers 55.5 102.3; 103.14; 105.5; 134.14 Dutch 113.5 France 99.8 study day 97.2; 96.8; 99.4 Exeter 112.13; 113.5 London glass exports to 74.5 Frongoch Distillery 89.12 GC commemorative 39.3 St Louis factory SR xi-xii Frost, Jennifer portrait 94.12 see also French glass; ‘The glass carafe’ 29.3 ratafia 97.8; 98.8 Francis, Grant R. Frost, John Fonthill Vase 137.26 Old English Drinking Glasses DJ 13 ‘The glass carafe: 18th-19th century’ JL 5.86-99 footstool, glass PP 49 The Romance of the White Rose 118.7 ‘This is glass’ 5.3 Ford, Henry 138.23 Francis, Peter JL 60.3; 64.6, 7; 65.7 Fulham glasshouse 94.5 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 21 Furlonger, Peter 108.13 Gennett, Adrienne bottles, square 114.7; 117.6 furnaces 105.2; 106.14, 15 ‘3,500 years of glass beads’ 132.6-10 glasses 129.25 Amsterdam 116.10 George I, King 109.12-13; 124.18; 131.18; DJ 43 baluster 117.4 enamels 110.4 arms 95.6 deceptive 117.7 fuel 2.3; 87.3; 100.16; 111.15 portraits 90.4; DJ 43 gin pigs 80.6; 81.11; Ex. 18 JL 7.6; 10.7-12 George II, King 53.3; 81.11; 105.12; 111.11; girandoles 115.15 Jamestown 111.3-4 117.4; Ex. 9 Glanville, Philippa and Hilary Young Kimmeridge 44.10 George III, King 57.8; 71.2; 90.4; 102.7; 105.1; 108.8, Elegant Eating 100.13 first lighting 117.3 14; 115.15; 132.7; 135.22-3 Glasgow 94.13 Lorraine ovens 107.15 arms 127.7; 135.22 JL 7.16-17, 21; 9.26 19c. 86.13 Champion SR 51 Burrel Collection 62.4; 72.10 Roman 118.10 coronation banquet 53.8; 56.2 The City Glass Works and Pottery 31.6; 38.8 Vauxhall 106.10 glass collection 100.15 Museums 15.6; 89.9; 95.5 see also glass-houses and glass-works porcelain 120.17 Pollock House Museum 13.3; 60.3 furniture, glass 55.2; 78.12; 79.8; 108.7; 110.15 portraits 81.11; 90.4 Station 85.2 table 110.15; 111.2 George IV, King (Prince Regent) 71.2; 133.29; glass 135.22; DJ 49 analysis 79.7; JL 7.69-70, 73; SR ix arms 127.7; PP 12 between the wars 38.5 collection 120.17 chemical composition 76.6; 93.2; 100.16-17 finger bowls and coolers 56.2 made with coal JL 10.7-12 G portraits 90.4; 105.12 conservation 17.3; 31.3-4; 56.56/9; 72.7 gadgets 103,1, 10-12 services 5.10; 83.5; PP 5, 10; 110.10; 135.9 dangers from 109.10; 118.18 gadrooning 115.3-6; DJ 45, 49, 51 George VI, King 108.8 definitions DJ 12; SR ix Gallé, Emile 12.4; 17.2; 18.1-2; 23.2; 24.3; 26A.4; Georgian glass 80.4 density measurements 98.2; 133.3; 134.3-4; 27.5; 28.3-4; 34.5; 60.3; 68.6; 76.3; 89.9 ‘Georgian cut glass’ 5.2 135.3 Emile Gallé ˗ Dreams into glass 29.2 German glass 27.5; 30.7; 73.8; 82.4; 92.5; 93.6; durability 21.2; SR 66 ‘The Gallé-Bowes connection’ 14.2 111.16-17; 128.25, 26; 130.18; 132.15 history SR ix-xii games 126.27 Baroque 136.12-14 looking at 128.24-6 Gardner, Paul Bauhaus 110.7 manufacturing techniques 81.4, 9 Frederick Carder 32.8; 33.8 Germany 77.6 nature JL 7.67-8, 72-3, 75-7 Garner, Philippe Kevelaer 92.2 range of artefacts JL 7.68-9 ‘’ 9.1 Germs, Henk, collection 133.16 research examples JL 7.70-2 ‘Pâte de verre’ 5.2 Gilbert and George 102.18 restoration 17.3; 66-5; 108.14-15; 125.17; 126.3 Garton, Sir Richard 131.27 gilders 107.8 technology 48.8; 50.3 gas generator SR 67 gilding 112.6; 106.14-17; 107.7, 8; 123.13; transformation temperature 104.3 gasolier 89.12 128.8; Col. 7; DJ 45, 46, 48, 52, 53; JL 1.21-32 usage 95.3 Gazeteer of Irish Stained Glass 43.6 Giles, David 103.20 workability 104.2-3 Geissler, Heinrich JL 11.96-7 ‘Collecting ancient glass’ 131.7-11 working properties JL 7.68 Gelfort, Elke and Guenter Doerfel Giles, James 64.8; 88.1; 101.11; 118.17; see also types of glass ‘Uranium glasses’ JL 11.91-102 Col. 3, 9, 14, 39 Glass (ed. Reino Liefkes) 74.11 gems 136.16-17 Gill, Eric 96.1; Ex. 22 Society 31.6; 124.9; 130.14 glass 136.11 gin 53.3; Ex. 9; 117.1, 3-7; 124.15 Glass Association 102.8; 115.7; 124.9; 130.3; 131.3; INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 22 137.2; 138.3 109.3; 110.2, 3; 111.2; 124.2 Netherlands 130.22-4 1st AGM 30.6 index on 140.1, 7, 32 Northamptonshire 73.7 Glass Cone 28.2; 109.9 see also Circle of Glass Collectors Nový Bor 89.10-11 inauguration 27.1 Glass Circle News DJ 15 Overseas House 95.6; Ex. 21 glass canes 137.8 centenary CS 2 Oxford 61.9 Glass Circle 37.1; 124.9; Col. 49; JL 6.4-5 Centenary Supplement 140.5, 7, 30 Philadelphia 120.2, 13-15 AGMs 24.5; 102.3-4; 140.24-5 colour 110.2 Scotland 109.4 commemorative Goblets 39.3 covers 137.3 Stourbridge 27.3; 48.1-2 Constitution 60.2; 61.12; 140.30; DJ 15 editors 102.2, 3-4; 121.2, 4; 122.2, 3 Sussex 36.3 Diamond Jubilee 67.2; 71.5, 6; 72.2 first edition 140.2, 30 USA 138.23-6 exhibition DJ 10 first forty issues, précis Ex. 2-5 Venice 95.13; 97.1, 3-4 50th anniversary 36.1; 37.7; 40.1; DJ 15 first 99 issues, excerpts collection 140.5, 7 Vienna 133.26-7 see also Strange and Rare exh. hundredth edition 100.2 Waddesdon Manor 15.5 foundation 11.1; 140.29-30; DJ 13 indexes 140.2, 5-7, 32 Whittington Court 42.1; 81.9 fund-raising auction 137.22-3 on Internet 112.2; 114.5 Glass Club Bulletin 10.3; 46.2; 57.5; 75.13; 79.9 gavel 30.2; 70.10; SR 69 production CS 3 Glass Collectors and their Collections in Museums in history DJ 13-19; SR vii-viii readership survey 123.2 Great Britain 82.4 invitation cards SR 74 Glass Circle outings DJ 14 Glass Collectors’ Fair 51.7 library 2.2; 10.3; 43.8; 49.5; 65.2; 73.2; 77.11; Bath 57.4-5 glass cupboards 104.15 90.5; 91.5; 138.3 Belgium 124.18 glass cutters 75.3-4; 81.6; logo 99.4 Broadfield House Glass Museum 27.3; 39.1-2; Col. 7, 14, 12, 27, 31, 32, 39, 47, 49 membership 17.1 48.1-2 London 78.6; 81.6; 93.3 Minute Books 101.17; SR 74 Brighton 133.29 trade cards 75.5-6; 76.5/7 paperweight SR 69 Bristol 19.2-3; 96.14 glass dealers DJ 14, 15 publications JL 9.95; 10.93; 11.116-17 Brussels 101.5 glass delusion 120.18; 140.19 From Palace to Parlour 140.5, 7 Buckingham Palace 95.6; Ex. 21 glass eaters 129.17, 18; 130.5 Glass Collectors and their Collections Cecil Higgins Museum 3.1; 52.7-8; 93.1, 8-9; Glass Engravers Guild 13.1 140.5, 7, 30 135.20; Ex. 8/10, 20 Glass Engravers’ Network 133.30 indexed 140.2, 5-7 Chelmsford Museum 70.5; 73.2 Glass Etc, Rye 109.3; 121.4 Journal 16.1; 36.1; 105.5; 106.5; 108.7; Cheltenham 81.9 Glass and Glazing Federation 77.6 140-5, 6, 7; CS 6-7; DJ 15; PP 104-5 Colchester 23.1 Glass and Glazing Products 77.6; 88.2 contents listed JL 2.88; 3.103, 104; Cologne 102.2; 103.8, 9, 13; 124.18-19 glass grinders 20.2 4.107-8; 5.112-13; 6.92-3; 7.103-4; 8.131- Czech Republic 117.2, 9; 119.8-9 Glass House Fields 108.2-7 4; 9.93-4; 10.90-2; 11.113-15 Drambuie collection 105.14 Ide family glassworks 109.5-8; 110.10; 111.5 secretaries 128.31 Dublin 63.7 Glass Interiors 54.8 70th anniversary 110.2 Hungary 133.27-8 Glass Makers’ Federation DJ 14 symposia Kenwood House 85.4 Glass Manufacturers’ Educational Trust 124.9 ‘Judging Jacobite glass’, 1996 67.2; 68.2, 10; London 132.26 Glass Manufacturers’ Federation 50.3 69.1, 10, 11, 13; 70.3 Manchester 66.14; 68.8; Ex. 14 Glass Music International Inc. 41.4-5 at BM, 1997 Col. v Mompesson House 12.3 Glass Sellers Company (Worshipful) 63.6; 96.8; venues DJ 14 Museum of London 85.4; 102.3; 131.27 128.8; 130.19, 20; Col. 1; website 76.3; 77.11; 83.2; 85.5; 100.17; 108.7; Nazeing Museum and glass works 122.15 JL 1.10, 47; 2.71-2, 75; 3.87 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 23 Awards 102.6; 112.1; 118.18; 124.19 Phoenix 16.2 Glisson, Francis JL 1.11 Liverymen 137.27 pictures 4.6; 29.5; 66.10; 94.5 Globalink 97.10 Prize 113.13 Portwall Lane 110.15 globes 70.11-12 salt 135.27 provincial 120.3 Gloine 98.5 see also bills Pugh 85.1; Ex. 19 glossary PP 100-1 Glass Society of Ireland 54.1/3; 98.5; 105.15 Scottish 87.3 goat-and-bee jug 137.4 newsletter 55.6 South Yorkshire 120.3 goblets 4.3; 10.4; 39.3; 67.8; 98.8; 127.9, 28; Glass Technology 46.6; 47.5; 50.5 Shinagawa 134.32-3 136.12, 22; Col. 11, 28, 54, 55; glassblowers 108.13 Turkey 105.3 JL 6.12, 13, 18, 19; PP 14, 50, 64, 73; advertisement JL 2.49 Wear Flint 110.10 baluster 129.5 bottle-blowers 123.22; 125.25 Winchester House 129.12; 130.20 Beilby Thompson 106.1, 2-3, 16; 108.15; 110.2 Chinese 64.1 see also Edinburgh; Falcon; Greenwich; Boosington 129.5; 130.6 lamp-work models 112.8 Kimmeridge; London; Nailsea; Vauxhall Buckmaster 74.13; 79.12 glassblowing 67.4 glassmakers Coronation 111.10 Beginning Glassblowing 88.14 bankruptcy sale JL 2.4-16 Culm 94.1/12 GlassCuts 138.21 Hebron 89.2 dragon 125.27 glass-houses and glass-works 12.5-6; 94.10 Newcastle 26A.3-4; 92.2 flower form SR 26, 27 activities in JL 2.5-6 pre-industrial 26Jy.1 GC commemorative 39.3 Apsley Pellat 62.2 prospects 89.2 Gof 26A.1; 26Jy.4 Bear Garden, Bankside 62.2-3; 99.13; 108.1, 5 recruitment 92.3 guilds’ 138.26 Blackfriars 130.17 of Stourbridge and Dudley 1612-2002 97.12-13 hunting 122.15 Boulton and Mills 102.10 glassmaking Nottingham 137.18-21; 138.4 Bowles 129.19-21 Babylonian 40.9 novelty PP 58 Canning Town 130.5-6 Continental 92.3-7 opaline PP 27 Century 103.16-17 courses 48.7; 49.2-3; 107.12-13 presentation to Charleston 40.1; 42.3; 61.2; Chelsea 134.35; 137.4 The Development of English Glassmaking 1560- Ex. 13; JL 6.68-72 Clavell 16.3; 43.10 1640 94.5/7 Rookwood 110.6 cones 39.1; 74.1; 88.3; 101.3; 116.1, 2 18c. techniques 6.2; 29.3-4 Royal Oak 120.13; Col. 11 Dublin JL 2.37-49; 7.50-2 history of 128.24-6 Sang 67.8; 137.220-1 Dyottville 137.6-9 19c. timelines 96.9-11 Scott 8.3 1stc. AD 138.13-14 shown in stained glass window 82.11 trick DJ 50; SR 29 Flint JL 5.75-85; 10.45-6 glassworkers 103.1; 104.2-3; 121.5 uranium PP 79 Fulham 94.5 bottle-blowers 123.22; 125.25 Venetian 78.1; 80.8; 98.1; 128.3 Harrachov 105.5; 128.13; 134.15 Chinese 64.1-2 Whitefriars 135.22, 23 Hayden’s 66.9; 67.9 lamp-work 112.8 see also Gof; Leith; Liberty; Rockingham; history 120.8-9 Nailsea 101.8-9 Whitehaven Goblet Holyrood Col. 13; 99.4; JL 10.35-43 pre-industrial 26Jy.1 Godfrey, Eleanor S. Honeyborne JL 2.4-16 wages 101.8-9 The Development of English Glassmaking 1560- Ide family 109.5-8; 110.10; 111.5 in World War I 136.18-21 1640 94.5/7 Minories 128.8, 10 Glauber, Johann 134.2; 135.3, 4 gold 130.14-16 Newcastle 95.7-8 Glaziers and Glass Painters 102.6 engraving 126.14-17 Nový Bor 44.8;105.5 glazma soda glass 105.3 tesserae 126.21 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 24 see also gilding Grenado Shells 55.7; 70.12 Artists in Cameo Glass 57.6; 60.3 gold leaf 112.6; 126.17; 127.7 Grendey, Giles JL 1.11-12, 15 ‘A history of the Heath Glassworks’ 86.6-8; gold-ruby glass 91.9; grey glass 126.26 87.6-8; 88.6-8/11; 89.6-8; 90.6 JL 6.8-19; 7.36; 10.36, 38, 39 Grignion, Charles JL 7.7-8, 13 ‘JL T. Fereday and Dynasty Crystal’ 73.3-4 gold sandwich glass 119.6-7 Gros, Gabriella 17.1 Haden, Sally Golding, Francis death 30.1; 31.5 ‘How four British glassmakers helped to ‘The collecting compulsion’ 129.6-8 ‘The Gallé-Bowes connection’ 14.2 modernise Japan’s glass industry’ 134.32-3 goldsmiths 107.7; 110.4 Weep for Lalique 14.4 Haedy, Christopher JL 1.10 Goldsmiths Company 65.2 Grosvenor House 35.3-4 Hailwood & Ackroyd 126.26 Goldsmiths Hall 77.2, 3 Museum 78.4 hairpiece SR 32 Gondelach, Franz JL 6.12 grozing 114.7 Hajdamach, Charles 15.1; 45.1-2; JL 4.64; 10.35, 51 Goodearl, Tom and Marilyn: Engraved Glass 80.12 Gudenrath, William 36.4; 54.1; 107.2; 110.4-5; collection 123.16-17 Goofus Glass 41.2-3; 139.16 118.9; 125.27; 126.17; 134.18-23; 138.25 in Erwin Eisch 131.29 Gordon, General PP 41 ‘Enquiries into glassworking decorative ‘The golden age of Stourbridge glass’ 52.9 Gozo Glass 101.4, 5 processes’ 67.4 ‘John Northwood and his influence on the Gracechurch Street Hoard 83.1, 6-7 Guepin Glass Collection 45.6 Stourbridge glass trade’ 7.1-2 Graham, Marjorie Guest Brothers 110.6; 111.8 ‘Sophistication and style in 20th century British Australian Glass of the 19th and early 20th Guild of Glass Engravers 8.2; 10.3; 15.6; 24.4; glass’ 123.3,12-13 century 22.5 28.1-2; 32.3; 35.2, 5; 44.9; 46.4; 65.9; 70.9; 20th century British Glass 103.10; 121.19; Grand Prix awards 110.5 100.22; 108.12, 13; 124.9 122.20-1 Grand Tour 77.1, 10 exhs. 3.4-5; 73.14; 93.14 Hall, James, collection 118.3, 16-18 grape bottles 84.11; 85.9 Jubilee 85.14 Halper, Vicki: Contracts 115.13 Graydon Stannus, Mrs 78.4; 83.12 Newsletter 79.9 Hamilton, Sir William 97.6-7 Great Exhibitions Guildford 58.1, 9; 62.3; 94.7 hammock, glass 138.2 1851 88.2; 107.17; 109.11; 130.12; 134.14 Museum DJ 41 Hampton Court JL 4.9; 5.87, 88; 7.16 Tunsgate 75.9; 90.9 chandelier JL 8.26-37 1862 118.2 Guildhall 93.14 fire 37.4-5 JL 5.87, 88 Gulliver, Mervyn Hanover, House of 63.2; 81.11; 87.9; 95.6; Greaves, John 140.4 Victorian decorative glass 96.13 105.1, 12-13, 17; 109.12-13; 110.16; Ex. 21 Greek Style 133.12-15 Gyles, Henry 47.5; 81.10 arms 95.6 Green, Hilary 49.4 JL 7.33, 34 horse 63.2; 95.6; 110.16; DJ 46; Ex. 21 Green, J. G. JL 5.88, 94 portraits 90.4 Green Valley Auctions 93.1, 7 see also names of monarchs Greene, John JL 1.47, 50, 55; 2.32; 5.65 Hansen, Theophil 133.12-14 Greener, Henry 22.2; 34.1; 108.8; 7.17, 22, 23, 24; H Harden, Donald B. Col. 47 10.45-6; JL 6.32-3, 40; PP 38, 48, 84 Glass of the Caesars 40.5 Haanstra, Ivo: Blue Henry 125.26 Greener, Robert JL 4.7-8; 6.32 Harding, Walter Col. 7, 57-60 Habatat Gallery, Detroit 138.23 Greenwich glasshouse 4.3; 69.5; 94.12; 120.13; collection 61.9, 12 Habsburgs 101.2 130.18 Hardman, John 37.3 Hack, Robert SR 64 Greenwood, Frans 4.3; 75.2; 92.1, 2, 6 Harewood House 85.8 Hackel, Hieronymus 139.8-11 Frans Greenwood, Glass Engraver 42.5; 43.7; 67.8 harmonica, glass see armonica Haden, H. Jack 86.1; 102.10; 113.16 Gregorio 107.6, 7, 8 Harrachov glassworks 105.5; 128.13; 134.15 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 25 Harris Museum, Preston 68.8 Hebron 89.2 ‘18th century glasses for the dessert’ Hartley and Co. 46.1; Col. 12, 13, 57-60, 63 Heemskerk, Willem van 92.13 128.21-2 Hartley colliery 102.8 Helsinki 108.11 Hoffman, Johann F. 38.2 Hartmann, Carolus Henderson, Julian Hoffman, Josef 128.12-13 Dam Glas im raum haida und Steinschonau ‘Some chemical and physical characteristics of Hogarth, William 81.10; 117.6; 124.15; 102.9-10 ancient glass’ JL 7.67-77 JL 7.8; 9.19 Hartshorne, Albert 71.4; 124.16-18; 125.3; Henley-on-Thames 12.4; 134.4-5 ‘An Election Entertainment’ JL 9.18, 19, 24 Col. 43; JL 1.4-5, 7-8 Henning, John 97.7 Holbourne of Menstrie Museum 59.4 collection 36.3; 124.16-18 Henzell, Joshua JL 5.77 Holland 4.3; 92.2-3, 4; 105.5; 106.16; 127.9 Old English Glasses 64.6; 118.7, 8; Henzey dynasty 62.2-3 Hollister, Paul 70.10 124.16-18; 125.2, 3; 132.16; Col. 10; DJ 15; 86.3 ‘The Crystal Palace’ 46.1 JL 1.7; 5.4; 11.10, 23 College of Arms 96.8 ‘Homage to Robert J. Charleston’ 61.3-4; Hartshorne, C. H. JL 1.7-8 see also armorial glass JL 8.11-13 Harvest mugs 108.8 Herbert, William JL 4.8, 16; 7.15 ‘Of metal mounts and millefiori’ 69.8 Harvey’s Wine Museum 19.2-3; 62.5; 65.4; 96.14; Herman, Sam 59.9; 114.12; 131.28; 136.22; Holly Amber Glass 131.14 97.3, 12, 13; 1101.15-116; Col. v JL 8.89 Holyrood Flint Glass Works 99.4; JL 10.35-43 Harwood Stephenson collection 82.7, 12 ‘Hexactinellida: glass sponges’ 140.15-19 Holyrood House Palace 86.3 Hasegawa, Kanae Higgins, Cecil 2.3; Col. 43; 135.13-16; JL 1.7 Hone, Galyon 102.8 ‘From treasure to pleasure, 2000 years of glass collection 130.6; 133.5; 135.12-16 Honey, W. B. JL 4.51 in Japan’ 82.5-6 Higgins Art Gallery & Museum, Bedford see Cecil Honeyborne, Robert JL 2.4 ‘Tosichi and Hisatchi; pioneers of modern art Higgins Art Gallery, Bedford Honeyborne glasshouse JL 2.4-16 glass in Japan’ 79.8 Higgott, Suzanne 99.4; 140.14 sale Catalogue JL 2.5-16 hats ‘Nineteenth-century British glass associated with Honeybourne, R. JL 10.40-1 glass 43.1; 137.8, 9 Sir Richard Wallace’ JL 10.44-63 Honeywood, Millicent in stained glass windows 104.1, 14; 105.11 ‘Venetian and façon de Venise enamelled, gilded Honey’s Book on Victorian Pressed Glass 83.11 Hauptmann, Emanuel 134.32-3 and millefiori glass’ 140.8-14 Hong Kong 104.15; 132.13 Hawaii 132.14 Hildyard, Robin hookahs 98.8; 110.6; 111.8; 128.7-10, 27; 128.7-8; Hawkes of Dudley PP 12, 13; ‘The glass collections of the Victoria & Albert 129.19-21; 131.6, 29-30; 132.6; 133.5; JL 7.15; 10.35-6, 38 Museum’ Col. 9-15 134.24-9; 136.4; PP 15-16 Hawkes, T.G., of Corning 138.19 Hillebauer, E. J. JL 11.103-12 Hookes, Robert 46.6; 62.2-3; 76.7; 114.4; 129.14; Hawkins collection 90.5 Himley Hall 58.4 130.19, 21; 131.4 Hayden’s glassworks 66.9; 67.9 Hines, Penelope: ‘Maurice Marinot’ 137.14-17 Hoolaart, Gillis Hendricus 126.11 Hayhurst, Jeanette 84.6; 95.14; 101.1 Hisatochi 79.8 Hope Cup 107.2; 118.9-10 ‘E. J. Hillebauer’ JL 11.103-12 historicism 66.4-5 hops 126.4; 127.20 ‘Fakes and forgeries’ 58.5 historicist glass 81.11 Hopton, John JL 5.77 Health and Safety 104.3; 105.3; 108.18 Hoare, Richard JL 1.10 Horner, Libby Hearne, John M. bills for glass JL 1.10-17 Frank Brangwyn: Stained Glass 125.27 Glassmaking in Ireland 126.24-5 Hobson, Diana 46.5 ‘Frank Brangwyn and glass’ 123.4-6 ‘Waterford glass’ 130.11-13 ‘Pâte de verre’ 46.1 134.35-6 heat-sensitive glass PP 82, 83 Hochschnitt glass 136.12-14 horns, glass 104.8; 132.31 Heath Glassworks, Stourbridge 86.1, 6-8; 87.6-8; hock glasses 123.16; SR 40 horses 88.6-8/11; 89.1, 6-8; 90.6 Hodkinson, Malcolm engraved 81.12; 97.1; SR 34 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 26 glass 97.1 Institute of Conservation (ICON) 126.3 prancing 63.2 intaglio vase 139.21 of Hanover 63.2; 95.6; 110.16; DJ 46; Ex. 21 I Integer House 77.6; 78.6 of Uffington SR 38 International Association for the History of Glass ice cellars 59.6 Hot Glass Show 131.32 3.1; 7.1; 11.1; 12.1; 13.1-3; 19.4; 23.2; 49.7; ice cream cellars 86.3; Col. 11 Hotblack, G. F. DJ 13 52.1, 2; 124.9 ice plate PP 13 Hotel Murano, Tacoma 125.20 International Congress on the History of Glass 12.1 Ide family glassworks House of 62.4 International Festival of Glass 118.18; 124.19; ‘The Ide family glassworks at Glass House Fields’ Hovorková, Libuše 130.15-16

‘The art studio of the Jablonec Museum of glass’ 109.5-8 International Glass Centre 104.3; 105.3; 107.12-13 ‘T & W Ide: The 20th century’ 110.10-11 119.10-11 Internet 70.4/13 ‘From T & W Ide to Rankin Glass’ 111.5 howdah 99.9 Inventories of Worcestershire Landed Gentry Illidge, T. JL 4.8-9, 17 Howells, Daniel 1537-1786 113.6 112.11 ‘Gold Sandwich glass in antiquity’ 119.6-7 Illustrated London News Ipswich Museum 23.1; 62.4 Imberton, J. D. 104.16; 105.3 Hubbard, A.C., collection 86.9, 13; 127.28 Ireland 71.11; 92.2; 106.4 Imperial Glass Co. 139.18 hubble-bubbles see hookahs JL 2.39-48; 7.50-2 index to GC publications 140 2, 5-7, 32 Hudson, Robert JL 4.7 Anglo-Irish glass industry 87.8 India 18.1; 92.7, 14; 131.29-30; 132.13, 14; Huguenots 109.13; 116.11; 132.20-1 Boyne, battle JL 7.41-2 134.24-9 Hulbert Glass Collection 45.1, 2 Celtic style JL 10.50-2 Indian glass 92.7 Hulse, Gillian Glass Society of Ireland 54.1, 3; 55.6; 98.5; beads 93.10 Inspirations in Kiln-formed Glass 122.22 105.15; JL 9.23 industrial espionage 72.5 Hubbard, A. C. 86.9/13 Glassmaking in Ireland 126.4-5 industrial exhibitions 30.3-4 human figures, glass 112.8-9; and hookahs 134.27-8 inkwells 77.12; 85.10; 137.9; PP 41; SR 41, 48 PP 32-3, 84, 85; SR 56 Knoys JL 9.23 inscriptions 27.8-9; 63.2; 79.3; 80.4; 96.1; 114.17; Hume, Ivor Noël National Museum of Ireland 60.6; 137.26 DJ 43, 46-7, 48, 49; Ex. 22; ; SR 55 ‘Bottled beer and handsome hookahs’ 128.6-10 JL 5.68-74 Ulster Museum 50.6 Arms of War SR 33 Hungarian glass 119.1, 4-5; 120.6-7; 121.15-17 see also Cork; Dublin; Irish glass Dutch 63.2; 92.4; SR 34 Hungary 133.2, 27-8; 135.20-1 Irish glass 46.2; 68.12; 85. 9; 91.1, 11-12; 100.3, 4; van Heemskerk 92.13 Hunt Clubs JL 9.15-20 134.27-8; 135.10-11; Col. 12 House of Orange 4.2 hunting glasses 81.12; 101.10, 11; 102.5; 107.16 commemorative 10.1; 11.3; 68.12; 69.10 Fiat DJ 47 Confederate 57.9; 85.4; 87.9; JL 9.17 drinking and table glass 136.22 funerary 103.18 fake 122.15 Gazeteer of Irish Stained Glass 43.6 Hanoverian 63.2; 109.13; 110.16; 131.18 The Green Collars 71.11 Leinster 99.7 Irish, ‘Land-We-Live-In’ Tarporley Hunt Club 71.11; 88.4; 101.11; 115.15 101.6-8 marked 100.3-4; 101.6-8 Jacobite 25.3-4, 5-6; 113.5; JL 5.68-74 True Blue Hunts 65.12-13; 68.12 Pugh glassworks 85.1; Ex. 19; JL 2.37-41 Liberty 63.2; 110.16; 111.2; DJ 46 115.14, 15 stained 43.6 music SR 2 Huntley House museum 63.9; 109.4 Franz Tieze 51.4; 69.10 typeface 79.4-5 Hurst Vose, Ruth 15.1; 104.14 see also Volunteer glasses; Waterford; Williamite verse 104.18 Hutton, John 8.2; 49.7; 51.7; 53.5; 66.1, 3 glasses Sir Watkin Williams Wynn 100.1; 111.7-8; Hyalith glass 136.17 isingglass 105.2 118.7 Islamic glass 14.1; 84.14; 90.4; 106.6, 14; see also lettering 107.2, 5-6, 8 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 27 beads 132.10, 11 in Chester 61.7 Union 69.9; 71.9; 101.6 in Corning Museum 123.20; 124.20 clubs 65.12; 82.13 Sir Watkin Williams Wynn 87.9; 100.1, 18; enamelled 61.11; 64.6 see also Cycle Club 111.6-8; 118.7, 8 Fatimid rock crystal ewer 117.16 dating 64.6, 7 Worcester 81.3/6 flower decoration 107.5 Drambuie Collection see separate entry see also Amen glasses mug 112.16 18c. JL 9.71-4 Jacobite material culture JL 9.77-8 in V&A 108.2 eleven wine glasses 119.16 Jacobite medals 71.2 in wrecked vessel 7.5; 20.2 engraved glasses JL 5.53; 9.62-3, 75-6 Jacobite toasting 53.8; 56.2; 66.11; JL 9.13 Isle of Wight 101.4-5; 115.18 engravers JL 3.40-78; 9.80-1 Jacobitism 71.2; 75.9; 79.5; 80.12; 111.6-8; 119.16; Israel 106.14; 131.5, 7; 133.4 Exeter flute 112.13; 113.5 121.8-9 Istanbul 107.13; 110.3 Fairfax 81.10 Jacobitism and the English people 71.2 ivory PP 84, 85; 99.9; 110.17;111.17 fakes and misattributions 64.6, 7; 69.9, 10-11; limericks about 72.15; 73.9; 74.9 70.3; 88.10 in Manchester 74.5 heraldic 86.3 see also Traquair House hoards 52.10; 120.9; JL 9.64-8, 80-1 Jacobs, Isaac PP 5, 18 iconography 125.10-11 Jacob’s ladders 43.1; 137.8 J inscriptions 25.3-4, 5-6; 113.5; JL 5.68-74 Jacquard, Max 75.2 The Jacobites and their Drinking Glasses 61.7; James, Donald, collection 122.17 Jablonec 105.5; 119.8, 110 62.5; 63.6; 90.7; 138.29-30 James, Elizabeth Jablonec Button, The 112.14; 113.7 judging JL 9.60-81 ‘Glassmaking in King’s Lynn’ 29.4-5 Jackson, Edward 96.8 GC symposium 67.2; 68.2, 10; 69.1, 10, 11, 13; James I, King 98.8 Jackson, Francis 62.3; JL 8.55, 57-69 70.3 James II, King 75.9; 82.5; 86.3 Jackson, Lesley in Melbourne 131.6 James Stuart (Old Chevalier) 57.9 100.14 Ronald Stennett-Wilson Newcastle 26A.3; 105.14 portraits 88.9; 90.4 20th Century Factory Glass 84.10 periods DJ 28-9, 34 Jamestown, Virginia 92.2; 111.1, 2, 3-4; 113.11; ‘Whitefriars glass – the Harry Powell years’ portraits 64.6, 7; 68.11; 69.10; 71.2; 74.5; 88.9; 131.24 68.5/13 90.4; 93.8; 105.14; 110.16; 112.13; Japan 79.8; 123.12-13; 134.32-3, 34 Jackson, Patricia 113.5-6; 117.10; DJ 28-9, 34; Ex. 20 Yokohama 92.14 ‘The Hampton Court Palace fire – rescuing pier Bonnie Prince Charlie and the making of a myth Japanese glass 82.5-6 glasses’ 37.4-5 91.8 Jarvis, Deming 106.11 Jackson & Straw 111.14-15, 16 reproduction JL 9.26, 62-3, 70, 73; 11.7-36 Jason head flasks 112.8 ‘Jacobean’ glasses , 18 JL 11.7-9 rose 63.2; 65.10; 66.9; 70.1, 5; 87.8-9; 93.8; jelly bowls, polygonal 73.8, 9; 74.4 Jacobite controversy 60.3; 64.6; 69.10-11; 70.3; 71.2 112.13; 114.17; 125.10-11; DJ 29; Ex. 20 jelly glasses 15.4-5; 61.13; 62.1; 74.4; 102.4; Jacobite Clubs 65.12; 82.13; ; 9.7-27 JL 8.18-25 Royal Oak goblet 120.13 117.10; 118.18; 128.20, 21-3; 131.19, 20; see also Cycle Club smashing glasses 57.8-9; JL 9.13 Col. 33; DJ 50-1, 52; Jacobite glass 3.4; 23.3; 34.4; 60.3; 65.7; 68.11, 12; Stiegel 65.10; 66.9 JL 2.9; 5.29, 34-6, 38-9, 52, 53; 11.82 70.11; 72.10; 76.4; 77.3; 82.4; 85.4; 87.8-9; ‘The study of Jacobite glass’ CS 10-11 jelly moulds 128.16, 20 88.10; 91.14; 92.8; 93.8; 106.17; 114.11, 17; ‘Success to the Society’ 59.5 Jenaer Glas 113.18 118.18; 131.19; 134.31; thistle 66.9; 125.10-11 Jerusalem 103.15 10, 15, 23-4; 28-9, 47; 20; Col. DJ Ex. Thomas collection 116.17-18 Jerwood Prize 97.13 JL 11.7-36; SR 50 at Traquair House 100.5-7; JL 10.14-33 Jeston family 86.7-8 armorial 86.3 tumbler 116.13 Jobling, James A. JL 6.32-45 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 28 Jobling, William SR 44 Kimmeridge glasshouse site 8.3; 15.3; 16.3; Jobling and Co. 34.1-2, 3, 4 43.10; John Baker’s late 17th-century glass-house at K 44.10; 49.2; 93.8; Ex. 7, 20 Vauxhall 106.10-11 ‘Kimono’ SG 71 Kaellgren, Peter John Bull PP 32-3 King, Dominic ‘Glass and rock crystal in the collection of Lord John Shaw’s Club JL 9.22 ‘Bottles and wine’ 71.7 Lee of Fareham’ 98.5 Johnson, Jerome JL 4.4-5, 8 King’s Champion rummer SR 51 ‘Refraîchissoirs or wine glass coolers’ 122.17 Johnston, William Robert, collection 130.8; 132.14 King’s Lynn 29.4-5; 101.13 Kamenický Šenov 90.12-13 joke glasses 126.26 JL 2.49; 8.62, 66-7 Kampfer, Fritz Jokelson Glass Collection 51.3, 9 see also Lynn glasses Beakers, Tankards, Goblets 10.4 Jones, John JL 10.48-9, 55 Kinnaird, Alison 71.10; 72.4; 94.7; 101.3; 108.12, 13, kantharos 131.8 Jones, Olive R. 65.2 14; 109.4; 136.23 Kaplan, David JL 8.91, 94 Jones, Owen DVD on art of 134.34-5 Kaplan, Leo 133.3 Examples of Chinese Ornament JL 4.23 Kirschenmann, John M. 137.8-9 Kedleston Hall 92.8 Josephinenhütte 128.15 Kit-Cat Club 66.3 Kellaway, Robert 119.9 Journal of Glass Studies (Corning Museum) 65.2, 5; JL 9.9-10 Keller, Joseph JL 4.23 69.2; 93.13; 106.15-16; 110.4, 14; 113.7, 14; decanter 94.14; 114.17 Kelly, Jessamy 118.9; 126.23; 134.35 glasses 61.12; 95.3, 10; 114.17 ‘Combining glass and ceramics’ 125.7-9 Joyce, Thomas toasts 75.10; 124.16, 17-18 ‘Glass as a medium for imitation’ 136.15-17 ‘Agate or glass?’ 136.9-11 Klaproth, Martin Heinrich V11.91 Kelly, William 97.7 ‘E. Varnish & Co’ 134.12-15 Klein, Dan 123.19; 138.27 kelp 106.11 jugs 11.79; JL 2.8; PP 51, 52, 53, 70, 82; SR 144 ‘Finding the face of contemporary British glass’ Kelsall, Keith 68.4; 70.9 coffee-pot shape SR 23 51.5 Glass in 18th Century England: the footed salver from ancient Rome 138.11-12 (with L. Ward) The History of Glass 30.7; 116.12 45.5-6 cream PP 20, 76, 78, 79; 109.17 Klimt, Gustav 128.11 Glass in 18th Century England: the open-flame crizzled 131.31 knife SR 28, 29 lamp 65.5 cut glass SR 23 knife rests 78.4; 111.12 Kempe collection 99.14 Davenport 125.17 knitting needles SR 28, 29 Kensington 106.18 goat-and-bee 137.4 Knole 86.3 Kent collection 91.6-7 helmet 92.11 knops 102.4; 109.13; 115.5; 135.6-8 Kentucky Derby souvenir glasses 113.1 ice-glass PP 85 bobbin DJ 44, 45, 51 Kenwood House 85.4 Jewelware PP 80 Knowles, Arthur, collection 37.8 Kevelaer, Germany 92.2 milk PP 76 Knowles, Graham 138.21; 139.20 Kew 105.10 Pyrex, measuring SR 66 Knowles, J. A. JL 1.24 Kidd, Thomas PP 40 Royal family SR 52 Kny, Frederick Englebert PP 56, 58; 115.17; Kiddell, A. J. B. 69.2 in Wallace collection JL 10.48-53 136.18, Kiddell, Shaun see also claret; decanters; ewers; water jugs 19 ‘Around the world in glass’ 132.13-15 JL 4.22-3, 28, 30, 33 Kilner, Tom SG 74 Kny, Harry 136.18-21 kiln-formed glass 117.12 Komaromy, Andras 111.9 kilns 110.4 Koob, Stephen P. Kimbolton church, Bedford 53.8/10; Ex. 8/10 Conservation and Care of Glass Objects 123.20 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 29 Kopic, Jaroslav Laméris, Kitty JL 8.88-105 ‘Some information on Kamenický Šenov ‘Vetro a retortoli’ 133.16-21; 134.18-23 ‘Catch it while you can’ 136.22-3 90.12- 13 lamps 64.9; 77.5; 103.13; 104.6; ‘Endless Column’ 54.2 Koppelman, Bunny and Charles, collection 102.7 DJ 50; JL 2.39 Glass Art 70.8 Köpping, Karl JL 7.56, 63 bases 111.8 Glass Art Gallery 110.7 Kothgasser SR 58 Conic JL 11.37 ‘Going for gold’ 130.14-16 Krebitz, Bohemia JL 1.21 covers 123.21 Past and Present 130.26 Kretschmann, F. JL 4.25, 39 flame 65.5; Col. 7 Peter Layton & Friends celebrating London Kreuger, Ingeborg 118.9-10 Gallé cameo 13.1 glassblowing 109.16 Kreybich, Georg Franz 82.4 kerosene 31.1 on Savoy Theatre 57.2-3 Krug collection 20.1; 23.3; 24.3 mosque 110.4 ‘Thirty years of Studio Glass in Britain’ CS 19-20 Kunckel, Johann JL 6.12-13 oil PP 88; 138.17-18 Lazarus collection 19.2; 27.6; 61.5 sanctuary 55 lead 21.1-2; 50.3; 124.3; 129.15; JL 10.37, 42 street 99.1, 8-9 ‘Lime and lead’ CS 8-9/11 sunumbra JL 11.89 lead crystal 91.4-5; 98.2; 131.24; Tiffany 14.1; 15.6; 64.9; 78.11 JL 2.71-84; SR 12 L UV 65.12; 66.3; 70.8; 106.5 composition 11.1 La Granja 93.1, 4, 5 lampshade PP 88 cooling rate 104.2-3 labels 131.28 lamp-worked development 92.2-7; 120.9 wine 115.12; 121.18; 123.22; 125.25; 126.3 beads 132.10, 23 discovery / invention 92.5-6; 110.2; 1730-2003 105.15 fountain PP 98, 99 114.1; 115.1, 2; 129.22; 134 16; Wine Label Circle 124.9 Landseer, Sir Edwin PP 75; 99.11 CS 8-9/11 Labhardt, Christoph JL 6.12 Lanmon, Dwight P. 54.1; 68.1, 2-3; 84.6; 104.5; de Gidts on 134.2; Noble on 129.12-15; lacquerware 136.17 121.2, 8 130.20-1; Smith on 116.8; Watts on LaFarge, John 139.17 The Golden Age of English Glass 126.25; 127.3; 114.2-4; 115.2; 116.8-9; 130.17-19; Laghi, Anna: Vetri da Farmacia 97.10 128.8, 9; 128.27; 135.6 131.31; 135.3-4 Lalique Church, Jersey 48.5 lanterns 104.7; 106.17; 109.11 influence of English abroad 92.3-4 Lalique glass 4.1;18.1; 23.3; 39.4; 40.3; 59.9; 61.11; railway 139.12; JL 11.89, 90 manufacture 114.3-4 63.11; 66.7; 67.9; 69.4; 88.9; 106.16; LAPADA 93.10 recipe 105.3 108.16, 17; 111.12; 113.18; 140-25-6 Laroon, Marcellus 81.10 style 115.2-6 purple 78.3/7 A Dinner Party 120.17 Lebeau, Chris JL 7.58 ‘Quatre Pigeons’ 86.1 Lattimo plates 77.1; 78.4 Lechevrel, Alphonse PP 9 Unique Lalique Mascots 136.23 Lattimore, Colin ; ‘Greener of Sunderland’ 22.2 Lee, Arthur Hamilton 98.5 Weep for Lalique 14.4 Lauenstein glasses 76.6-7; SR 58 leech jars 89.4-5; 90.11 Lalique, Marc 4.1 Launert, Edmund Leerdam 129.28; 130.23 Lalique, René 140.25-6; JL 6.34, 35-6, 42, 43 The DROM Collections of Perfume 54.3 Leeuwenhoek 26Jy.4 The art of René Lalique 44.5 Perfume and Flagons 34.5 Legras, François 112.9 Lambeth Perfume and Pomanders 40.8 Lehman, Caspar 36.2; 38.2; JL 6.8-10, 15, 16 archaeological finds 49.1, 2; 64.4 ‘Scent bottles’ JL 1.58-64 Lehman, Robert 68.1, 2-3 Glassworks 14.1 Layton, Peter 9.2; 44.8; 54.2; 57.1-3; 59.3, 8; 62.5; Leibe, Frank and Jeanette Hayhurst Lambs Passage Studio 27.1-2 92.11; 140.29 Glass of the ‘20s and ‘30s 81.12 Lambton, Henry 127.7 ‘British Studio Glass’ 57.1-3 Leicester Museum 22.1 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 30 Leifke, Rieno, ed.: Glass 74.11; 75.2 134.5; 138.24; JL 8.88-9 56.2-3; JL 5.78, 80 Leigh, David: Decanters 1760-1930 94.10 A Life in Glass 129.27 archaeological reports 24.1; 25.1; 49.1-2; 64.4 Leighton, Thomas 138.18 Litvak Gallery, Tel Aviv 122.16 ‘The study of Jacobite glass’ CS 10-11 Leith Goblet 106.18; 107.9; 126.11 Liverpool Museum 62.4; 89.9 ‘Traquair House glass’ 100.5-6 Lelievre, Frank Lloyd, Philip L. 105.2 London 52.7; 91.2; 92.7, 14; 140.11-12; Ex. 8 ‘Jacobite glasses and their inscriptions’ 25.3-4 Lloyd, Ward 137.27 exhs. re 84.7; 97.14 JL 5.68-74 A Wine Lover’s Glasses 86.9/13 glass cutters in 78.6; 81.6 Lemington Glassworks Cone 74.1 Lobmeyr, J. & L. 34.8; PP 67; 133.12-15; 134.3 glass engravers in 78.6; 93.2 lemon-squeezer feet 122.6-8; 123.14-15; Col. 51, 52 glasses 124.4, 5; 127.23-4, 25-6 glass exports to France 74.5 lettering / calligraphy 1.1; 4.3; 28.1; 36.6; 89.14; J & L Lobmeyr 127.25-6 glass-houses/glass-works 62.2-3; 76.5/7; 96.1; 108.13; 109.12-13; 115.15; Ex. 1, 22 vase 107.17 106.10-11; 114.2; 122.22; 124.3; Dutch 92.13 Locke, Joseph PP 50, 82; 106.12; 138.19; JL 6.54-67 130.17-18; 136.22; DJ 18 Levens Hall collection 88.4 Locksley Hall 94.4 see also Greenwich; Southwark; Vauxhall Levin, Moses Lewis 34.6 Lole, F. Peter 58.2; 68.8; 88.5; 93.8; 140.2; Ex. 20 A History of Glassmaking in London 120.5; Lewis, W.: Commercium ... JL 1.22 ‘All in a twist’ 123.10-11 122.3; 137.24-5; 140.31 Libbey Glass Manufacturing JL 7.58-9 ‘Clubs & their glass in the eighteenth century’ The 100 Best Stained Glass Sites in London 140.27 Libby (Libbey), William L. 112.10, 12; 129.26; JL 9.7-27 lighting 114.4 JL 6.56-7 ‘Clubs and their glasses’ 75.10 Milestones Hotel DJ 14 Libby Glass Co., Toledo 87.3; 138.19; JL 6.56-7 ‘Dram glasses’ 124.14-15 see also Museum of London Liberty Bell 120.13 ‘The eighteenth-century glass bills and JL 138.10 Liberty goblets 63.2; 110.16; 111.2; DJ 46 inventories at Traquair House’ JL 10.14-33 London Gazette 94.5/7 Liefkes, Reino: Glass 74.11 18th century trade cards and bill heads 95.4-5 London Glass Manufactory 136.10 light 102.5 ‘English provincial glass cutters and engravers c. London Glassblowing Workshop 9.2; 19.4; 46.6; light emitting diodes (LEDs) 139.2-3 1795’ 75.3-4 50.6; 59.3; 68.2; 69.1, 13; 71.6; 104.15; 130.15, Lightfoot, C.S.: Ancient glass in National Museums ‘Further Ablutions’ 58.6-7 16, 26; 132.26 Scotland 111.14 ‘The Gask AMEN glass’ 89.3/10 London International exh., 1862 118.14-15 lighthouse lanterns 109.11 ‘Glacial archives’ 6-7 London Sandblast Decorative Glass Co. 66.1, 2-3; lighting 94.13; 103.14; 106.11; 134.11, 25 ‘Glass and the great Sir Watkin Williams Wynn’ 110.11 London 114.4 111.6-7 London 1753 (British Museum) 97.14 see also chandeliers; lamps; lanterns ‘Glass and the Scottish History Society London Tradesman, The (1747) 20.2 lime glass 138.18 Publications’ 54.6-7; 55.7-8 Londonderry Service 71.11; 79.3; PP 16 ‘Lime and lead’ CS 8-9/11 and Glass Circle News 102.2 Longfield glass JL 7.40-5, 46, 47, 48, 49 Lincoln Cathedral 94.4 ‘Glass cutters’ trade cards’ 76.5/7 looking-glass see mirrors Lindstrand, Vickie 131.5 ‘The Hoards of Jacobite glass’ JL 9.64-9, 80-1 Loos, Adolf 127.23-4 Linlithgow Palace 75.9 ‘100 years of glass at Tatton Park; from Lorimer, George H., collection 120.13 lion masks 133.21 Warrington to Baccarat’ 59.6 Lorraine 107.14; 108.9 Lipofsky, Marvin 140.31 indexes to GCN 140.2, 5 Loseley House, Guildford 107.16-17 liqueur 94.8 ‘The Jacobite glass controversy’ 69.10-11 lost wax (cire perdue) technique 86.1; 88.9 Lithyalin glass 136.17 ‘Limpid Reflections’ [regular series] loving cups 99.2; 121.4 beakers 136.6, 16 ‘London glass cutters and engravers’ 78.6 Cobbe 7 JL 7.40-4, 46, 47, 48, 49 litigation 106.12 ‘The Rose & Thistle’ 125.10-11 Whittington JL 6.68-72; 7.19 Littleton, Harvey K. 55.6; 110.7; 130.14; 131.28-9; ‘The Royal Finger Bowls and Coolers Mystery’ Lowth glass 108.9 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 31 Lowther, James, 1st Earl Lonsdale JL 9.12 Månsson, Peder JL 1.19-20 Maydwell, Glisson JL 1.11, 12, 13, 14, 16 Lloyd, Ward: A Wine Lover’s Glasses 86.9/13 marbles SR 30 Maydwell and Windle JL 4.5; 5.43; 11.52, 62 ‘Luck’ glasses 54.9-11; 64.10-13 Margaret, Sarah 76.1 mazarines JL 1.12 Luck of Edenhall 54.9-11; 66.12, 13; 97.13; 98.8; Marie-Therese, Empress 101.2; 117.5 McConnell, Andy 102.2; 103.11; 109.3-4 106.8; 107.1 Marinot, Maurice 22.1; 137.14-17 ‘American glass – the British connection’ 87.4 Luthery, Ognybene 94.5, 7 Marion, Percival ‘Czech glass’ 116.6-7/15 2.4; 21.1; 97.13; 98.8; 110.2, 5; 115.18 Glass and its Manufacture 102.10 The Decanter 100.11; 136.23 Lyme Park 52.10; 72.10; 86.3; 105.8; JL 9.21, 25 Maritime Museum 98.8 ‘Domhnall Pádrag ÓBroin’ 105.6-7 Lynn glass 65.5; 74.2; 101.13; 131.18; DJ 48; SR 20 Marsh, Madeleine: Collecting the 1950s 78.12 ‘The Genius of René Lalique’ 140.25-6 Lyon & Turnbull 106.17-18; 107.9 Marshall, Jo 80.2; 82.6; 84.7; 90.5; 93.9; DJ 18 ‘Glass collecting’ CS 4-6 Glass Source Book 52.2 ‘Images of glassware at the ... Exhibition, 1862 Marshall, Monica (Mrs. H.R.) 60.7; 61.9; Col. 27, 54 118.14-15 Martell Cognac 28.1 ‘Kenneth M. Wilson’ 103.7 M Martin, Bob 101.10 ‘Moulded English glassware to 1835’ 84.5-6 Martin, Joseph JL 4.4 ‘Scratching around’ 131.27 Maastricht 139.2-3 Martinnón-Torres, Marcos ‘Seeking out 20th century Scandinavian glass’ Macbeth-Evans Glass Co. 139.16-17 ‘Alchemy, archaeology and glass’ 131.24 108.10-11 Mackenzie, David, collection 68.9 Martlew, David ‘A tale of two flasks’ 123.7 MacKintosh, E. E. B. DJ 15 ‘Portrait of a 19th century furnace’ 86.13 20th century glass 109.1, 3, 16; 113.7 Madigan, M.JL: Steuben Design 101.18 Mary, Princess of Orange 4.2; 86.3 McKearin, Helen JL 5.57 Maidwell, James JL 1.10 Mary Magdalene 105.13 ‘Possets, syllabubs and their vessels’ 20.3; majolica 83.13 Mary Rose (ship) 104.15 JL 57-67 Majolica and glass from Italy to Antwerp and Maryport Glassworks 66.10 McLachlan and Co.: JL 7.15, 20 93.13 beyond masks 133.21 Cottage Glassworks 42.4-5 Malcolm of Poltalloch, collection 1.2 Mason, C. Kirkby JL 1.5-6 McLaren, Graham: Studio glass 1960-2000 94.10 Mallet, John: ‘Robert Charleston’ JL 8.16 Masonic decanter 129.11 McNally, Paul: Table Glass in Canada 24.4-6 Mallett & Son 99.4 Masonic gavel SR 29 mead glasses DJ 45 Malta 101.4-5; 135.2 Masonic glasses 47.1-2; 98.7; Meaker, Charlie 49.4 Mamluk 105.3 Col. 7, 28, 29, 30, 31, 54; JL 8.38-53; SR 38 measurement Mammoth glasses 61.10-11; 63.8 Beilby 104.1, 17; 118.1, 18; 127.9, 12-14; 128.4; in Scotland 102.11-12 Manchester 14.3; 74.5 129.9-114; 131.29 volume 102.11, 12-13 Art Gallery 31.2; 51.6; 68.8; 69.6; 92.11; 14 Ex. initialled 127.12; 128.4 measures 89.9 GC Weekend 66.SuPP ; 68.8; Ex. 14 rummer DJ 49 liquid JL 5.86, 90; PP 22 glass industry JL 4.64-83 match holder 112.8 pharmacists’ JL 1.38 Manley, Cyril: Decorative Victorian Glass 19.5; 22.4 Mat-su-no-ke PP 90 whisky 125.11 Manor House Museum, Bury St. Edmunds 63.11 Matthews, William JL 2.57-8 measuring instruments SR 66, 67 Mansell, Joshua 62.2 Matthias, Gayle 112.1 medallions Col. 23-4; see also Tassies Mansell, Sir Robert 2.3; 43.10; 62.2; 87.3; 104.10; matting 109.7 medical glass 93.12; 94.14 114.6; 116.12; 119.9; 129.13, 22; 130.19, 21; Maxwell, A. C., collection 10.2 bottles 73.9; 102.13; 107.6; JL 1.37 134.16-17; 135.4; Col. 7; Maxwell-Stewart, Christopher Medieval glass 11.4; 79.1, 2; 86.10-11; JL 7.72 1.46; JL 10.6-12 ‘The lemon-squeezer foot’ 122.6-8 conservation 31.3-4 Mansion House 77.3 May Glass Fair 103.20 in Czechoslavakia 47.6 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 32 Medieval Glass for Popes, Princes and Peasants glass 139.3-4 ‘Nineteenth and twentieth century 124.20 large plate 132.24 commemorative glass’ 42.3-5; JL 15-31 stained, analysis 135.17-19 mirrored rooms 116.13 Victorian Table Glass and Ornaments s 9.2 types 107.6 Newhailes ‘Window’ 116.13 Morris, William 15.2; 56.4-5; 106.17; 129.23 Medina glass 101.4-5; 115.18; 135.2 Old Vic 80.8 Morrison Tazza 31.5; 37.8 Megahey, Leslie 102.9-10 prices 80.8 Mortimer, JL Hamilton 56.6, 9 Meissen porcelain JL 5.29; 7.32-3; 9.29 silvering 109.6; 112.6; 134.12 Mortimer, Martin 92.13; 103.13; Col. 14 Melbourne collection 5.4 theft 127.14-19 and English Glass Collecting for Beginners Mercier, Philippe 128.16 see also pier glasses DJ 13, 33-5 merese 101.14-15 Mocatta, Charmian: Lettering on Glass 89.14 ‘Baluster drinking glasses’ 71.8 Merrett, Christopher JL 7.6-7 Modeles et tailes de Cristaux Anglais JL 11.77-90 The Baluster family of English drinking glasses (trans.) The Art of Glass 93.3; SR 74 Mohn, Samuel 126.6-7, 24, 27 32.4 Merry-Go-Round Bowl 113.1 Moir, Mike: ‘The Vienna Secession and glass design’ ‘The crystal chandelier from the King’s audience Merseyside, ‘National Museums and Galleries 128.11-15 chamber’ JL 8.26-37 Col. 57-64 MoLAS Monographs 106.10; 111.18 The English Glass Chandelier 86.10 Mesopotamia 59.3-4 Molenyser, H. 83.5 ‘Howard Phillips’ 69.5-6; Ex. 12-13 Metcalfe, Anne 67.13 Molineaux, Webb & Co. 4.4-5; 83.5; PP 68; ‘John Bacon’s Letters Today’ DJ 33-5 ‘Paperweights: an overview’ 58.2-3 JL 4.64-7, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78, 81 ‘Marked Irish glass’ 100.3-4; 101.6-8 Paperweights of the 19th and 20th Centuries 85.7 Mompesson House 12.3; 44.1; 62.4 beads 132.10, 11 Metropolitan Museum, New York 138.26 Monart Glass 96.14 mosaics 107.7; 126.21 Meyer, Peter, collection 132.27; 133.4 Monod, Paul: Jacobitism and the English people 71.2 Design sourcebook mosaics 78.12 Meyer, Vera 41.4-5 Monteiths 94.8-9; 95.11; 96.3; 131.3-4; DJ 51 micro-mosaics 87.1 micro-mosaics 87.1 Moodie, Kari paperweight SR 60 microphotography 125.4-6 ‘Report on the Glass Circle trip to Cologne’ 103.9 Tiffany 120.2, 15 microscopes 26Jy.4 Moody, Brian: The Windmills’ JL 6.46-53 see also tesserae Military, glassware used by 34.6; JL 9.23, 26 Moor, Andrew: 53.5 Moser, Koloman 128.12-13 milk bottles 29.6; 126.22 Moor Lane glasshouse JL 4.6 Moser Glass Enterprise 30.6 136.15-16 Moore, Harriette artistic glass 82.8 millefiori 8.5; 68.2-3; 69.8; 140.13; Col. 39; SR 7 ‘British and Irish ... table glass’ 136.22 mosque lamps 110.4 Miller, Mrs. G. 89.5 Morrell, Sue 27.1-2 Moss, Simon 54.2 Miller, Judith: A Closer Look at Antiques 85.7 Morelli, Allesio DJ 38 mould making 127.26 Miller, Ormgard 111.4 Moretti, Cesare mould-blown glass 138.11-15 Mills, Mary C. and Rebecca White Glossario del Vetro Venziano 97.10 moulded glassware 84.5-6; 96.9 ‘Rediscovering American glassworkers (with Tullio Toninato) Glass recipes of the bowls DJ 43, 45, 46, 48 whimsies’ 137.6-9 97.10 see also press-moulding Mills, Timothy 101.13 Ricette vertrarie del Rinascimento 126.18; moulds 69.8; 137.9; SR xi Rummers 135.25-6 128.29-30 American 138.17 minnow traps 124.22 Morris, Barbara Col. 37, 38 jelly 128.16, 20 Minories glasshouse 128.8, 10 ‘Aspects of English pressed glass’ 11.4-5 pedestal stem 71.5 mirrors 14.2; 67.10; 85.8, 9; 98.11; 99.9/13; 135.3 ‘The Bathgate Bowl’ JL 2.17-25 Mount Washington Glass Company 106.11-12; Duke of Bedford’s 118.6; JL 11.54-6 ‘The early stained glass of ’ 56.4-5 129.26; 131.13, 14 George III 126.15 ‘Felix Summerly Art manufacturers’ 26Jy.2-3 mounts 117.16 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 33 metal 69.8 translation: The Art of Glass 93.3 Renaissance 68.3 Netherlands 26A.3-4; 92.3-5; 105.5; 133.16-21; silver 91.1, 6-7; 133.20 N 137.13 silver-gilt 68.1 GC visit 130.22-4 Nace, Aprille with Regan Brumagen and Emily Davis mug Col. 35, 36 Gemeente Museum, the Hague 130.22; 132.16- ‘A century of Pyrex’ 139.12-15 Müleib, Horst, collection 132.27; 136.7 21; 140.3 Nailsea glassworks 14.1; 100.16-17; 105.5; Mum 94.6, 8 The Hague 4.3 Col. 9; JL 5.87; PP 60; SR 26, 29 Muncaster Castle 66.10 House of Orange 92.13 archaeology 32.1-2 Murano 28.6; 49.5; 74.3; 107.6-8, 9, 15; 112.9; Orange Societies 11.3; 90.4; 120.13, 14 cave 102.10 114.1; roemer from 83.10 Nailsea Glass 75.6 JL 1.47; 6.8 Roman glass in 133.7-8 wages 101.8-9 books on 97.9-10; 98.1, 13 United Provinces 92.13; 101.2 Nailsea style 138.9; JL 5.87 Archimede Seguso 52.2 see also Amsterdam; Dutch glass; Holland Nancy 116.13 GC visit 95.2, 13 netsuke PP 29 Napoleon portrait plaque 132.15 Museum 13.3 Nevers, France 112.8 Nash, Arthur Douglas 139.17; JL 7.58-9 Murray, Keith JL 7.58, 66 New Bedford Glass Museum 44.4 National (Early) American Glass Club (NEAGC) 10.3; Murray, Sheelagh New England Glass Company 46.2; 77.8; JL 6.56 11.6; 13.3; 34.7; 43.8; 44.2; 64.3; 73.2; 75.2; The Peacock and the Lions 23.3; 25.2 New Glass Review 106.15; 109.16; 118.11; 123.20 77.8; 79.9; CS 2; 105.18; 112.2; ; museum gel 131.5 120.13-15 New Lanark 97.7 124.9 Museum of Industrial Archaeology 8.1 Newark Antiques Fair 95.9 restores gasolier 66.5 Museum of London 10.1; 12.1; 17.1; 25.1; Newbattle House 96.6 Glass Club Bulletin 10.3; 46.2; 57.5; 78.12 40.1, 2; 69.1, 11; 83.1; 84.7; 91.3; 101.13; Newby, Martine S. 85.5 National Art Collection Fund see Art Fund 107.3, 4, 7-8 ‘Ancient glass: a fishy tale’ 59.3-4 National Geographic Magazine 58.5 archaeologists 49.2 ‘The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford’ Col. 25-32 National Glass Centre, Sunderland 70.2; 76.8-9; GC visit 85.4; 102.3; 131,27 From Palace to Parlour 97.2; PP 99 77.2; 82.14; Ex. 16 MoLAS Monographs 106.10; 111.18 Glass of Four Millennia 85.6 National (Royal) Museum of Scotland 13.2; 63.9; Museo Correr 23.2 ‘The new cameo vase’ 121.6-7 78.3; 111.14; 127.28 museums Col. v ‘Venetian glass – the splendours of the National Portrait Gallery 90.4; 101.10 see also names of museums Renaissance’ 75.7 National Trust 52.10; 86.3; 101.10-11; 105.8 musical decanters 81.8; 93.12 (with D. Schut) The Fascination of Ancient Glass Navarro, Juanita musical glasses 37.2-3; 41.4; 44.10; 61.12; 71.11; 110.14 ‘Composite glass objects’ 131.25 85.3; 92.8 Newcastle Bridge SR 46 Naworth Castle JL 9.11 ‘Singing glasses’ (‘flip-flops’) 137.7 Newcastle glasses (light balusters) 92.1, 2-7; Nazeing Glass Works 66.7; 95.12; 122.15, 22; 123.21 musical instruments, glass 85.2 93.2-3; DJ 34, 46-7 exhs. 95.12; 96.11 trumpet 81.11 Newcastle glasshouses 95.7-8 museum 113.12 mustard jars 131.13, 14 Newcastle-upon-Tyne 106.3; 114.6-7; Neighbours and Successors of Rome 137.24 Mycenaens 132.8-9 JL 4.6-8; 5.75-80, 81, 83, 85; 7.21; 9.31, 33 Nelson, Admiral Lord 42.4; 112.7 mystery clock 87.14 bridge 42.4 portraits 90.5; 107.9 glass bills 95.1, 7, 8 Neri, Antonio glassmaking in 26A.3-4; 92.2 L’Arte Vetraria 90.5; 114.14; 116.10; balusters 26A.3-4; 126.11, 13; 127.6, 9; 130.6 129.14, 15, 19; JL 7.6, 7, 12, 13 Beilbys in 127.6-11 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 34 Jacobite 105.14 Norway 68.6; 108.11 / opaline JL 10.38, 39; PP 23, 25, 27, 75; stems 91.4, 5; 92.1-7; 93.2, 3 Norwegian glass 82.1, 11 139.16 Jubilee exhibition JL 7.16 Gammelt Norsk Glass 24.1-2 opalescent vase PP 25 Newell, Sue 99.4 Royal 68.6 opaque twist stems 94.1; 108.17; 123.10-11; ‘The Regency glass services of Sunderland’ 79.3 Norwich: 18c. JL 2.49-64; 4.9-10 131.18; 132.16-19; 133.22-5; ‘The Roger Pilkington collection’ 134.30 Norwich Castle Museum 63.8 Col. 17, 18, 19, 21, 22; DJ 26-7 ‘Sale of the Henry Fox collection’ 102.14-15 Notley, Ray 80.2 knops 135.6-7 Newfoundland 70.4 Carnival Glass 84.10 series terms 132.16-17; 133.22-5 Newhailes 116.12-13; 117.11 ‘Carnival glass – love it or leave it’ 41.1-2 opaque white enamel 118.18; 127.8-19 Newliston house 105.9 ‘Early 19th century Bohemian glass’ 49.3/8 opaque white glass 88.1; 116.2; 119.1; 126.20; Newman, Harold DJ 12 Popular Glass of the 19th and 20th Centuries 131.19, 20; 136.15; 137.4; Newnham, Kate 82.8-9 Col. 9, 43; PP 90, 91, 97 ‘Chinese glass at Bristol Museum’ 132.23 quiz 53.3/7; Ex. 9-10 lattimo 136.15 Newton, Roy Nottingham Goblet 137.18-21; 138.4 Opie, Jennifer 74.11; 75.2; 100.13 ‘Current thinking on the conservation of Nottinghamshire 129.22-3 Oppenheim, Leo medieval stained glass’ 31.3-4 Novy, Petr Glass and Glassmaking in Ancient Mesopotamia ‘The durability of glass’ 21.2 Glass Christmas Tree Ornaments 127.3, 26 32.4 (with S. Davidson) Conservation of glass 51.2 Nový Bor 29.1; 43.4, 5; 44.8; 59.8; 92.2; 105.5 Oppitz, Paul JL 10.47-9, 55, 64-75; Nicholson, Eirwen GC visit 89.10-11 PP 7, 44, 45, 46, 47-8 ‘Historians and curators and Jacobite material Nuremberg JL 6.11 optic fibres 87.14 culture’ JL 9.77-81 Nursery Rhyme pieces PP 84 optical glass 10.1-2; 125.4-6 Nicholson, Robin opticians JL 11.53-4 Bonnie Prince Charlie and the making of a myth Orange, House of 4.2; 92.13; JL 9.14 91.8 see also names of monarchs night-lights PP 89; SR 63 Orange Societies 11.3; 90.4 shades SR 63 O toast 120.13, 14 Noble, Michael Orchard pattern SR 36 obituaries ‘Flint glass’ 129.12-15 Orrefors Glasswork 42.6 see death notifications, appreciations ‘Flint glass: some further thoughts’ 130.20-1 Osler, F. and C. 51.3; 62.5; 75.1; 78.12; 99.4; and obituaries ‘The value of cullet to modern bottle-makers’ Col. 19; JL 11.77; PP 6, 49 ÓBroin, Domhnall Pádrag 105.6-7 122.9 Ostergard, Derek 101.12-13 Oddy, Revel Col. 22-3 Nohaki, Yumi 101.3 Oundle 73.7; 110.7 O’Fallon, J. M. JL 10.50-3, 62; 11.106 nomenclature 84.9; 98.9 Owen, Hugh JL 4.84 O’Geary, Sean: ‘Collecting ales’ 124.6-8 Nonsuch Palace 60.4; 106.6-7; 140.8, 11 Oxford Old Glass Beautiful (Mills & Boon) 75.6 Norfolk 74.2/13; 140.12 Christ Church 13.1 Old Warden, Bedfordshire 52.8; Ex. 10 Northampton Museum 73.7 GC visit 61.9 Oldknow, Tina 138.31 Northumberland Glass Co. 95.1; JL 5.77-9, 84 see also Ashmolean Museum Collecting Contemporary Glass 139.22-3 Northumberland House 103.14 Contemporary Glass Sculptures and Panels 118.11 Northwood, Harry 139.16 25 Years of New Glass Review 106.15 Northwood, John 7.1-2; 12.6; PP 8, 50, 51, 52; 99.1; Olympia Fair 35.2, 3; 105.17; 108.16; 109.17 116.11; JL 11.106-7 ‘onion’ bottles 104.6; 128.7; 130.4; 138.6 John Northwood 113.16 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 35 98.14; 109.17; 110.18; 115.17-18; 118.16; collection 45.2; 72.1, 8, 9; 73.14; 74.10; 75.1, 125.21 11, 12; 128.5 Baccarat 118.2 death 60.2 P Bader collection 82.11 Partridge, Victoria Pacifico Glass Collection 27.3 Baroness de Bellet collection 123.18 ‘The Higgins’ 135.12-16 Page, Jutta Annette 138.23-4 bull SR 48 Passion for Glass, A. (ed. R. Watban) 138.27 The Art of Glass 113.5; 113.7 Cambridge Paperweight Circle 46.2 patch stand DJ 51 in Majolica and glass from Italy to Antwerp and Chinese SR 61 pâte de verre 5.2; 46.1; 109.8; 125.8-9, 16 beyond 93.13 Chris Crabtree collection 123.18 patent law 106.12; 129.12-13; 130.17-19, 20-1; painted foot DJ 50 Clichy 111.17 131.31 painting on glass reverse painting on glass see danger from 118.18 Paterson, John, collection, 7.4 paintings of drinking scenes 66.3, 5; 85.1; 104.10; De Witt Clinton SR 46 Patrician glasses 124.4, 5 122.10, 11; 128.16; 133.16-21; Ex. 19; JL 9.10 diamond 131.4 Pax, Hildegard: Glass at Central 128.29 ‘An Allegory of True Love’ (Pourbus) 133.16-17 dogs PP 79; 99.11; SR 69 Paxton, Joseph 46.1 Conversation Pieces 81.10; 120.17; 122.10 1824 72.4 Payne, Benjamin JL 1.11, 14; 4.4, 8 ‘Le dejeuner d’huitres’ (‘Oyster Feast’) 56.2; 86.4 1842-1860 80.3 Paynter, Sarah and David Dungworth A Dinner Party (Laroon) 120.17 English 72.4 Archaeological Evidence for Glassworking 127.26 gin 117.6 fakes 46.2 Peace, David 96.1, 4, 5; 108.12-13 ; Ex. 22 Hogarth 81.10; 117.6; 124.15 Gingham 133.31 ‘The glass engraver as calligrapher’ 1.1; Ex. 1 ‘An Election Entertainment’ JL 9.18, 19, 24 Bob Hope’s 136.3 Glass Engraving 36.6; 96.1; Ex. 22 ‘The Horrors of the Spanish War’ (Bolswert) lion PP 74-5 Peach Blow 44.4; 103.2; 106.12; 138.19; 133.21 19-20c. 85.7 CS 2; JL 6.57; PP 25 ‘The Hunt Breakfast’ 86.4 Old Glass Paperweights (E. Bergstrom) 73.9; 74.7; Peake, Mervyn 83.11; 84.6 Nehri pastels (Trost) JL 9.14, 20 Ex. 15 Peckitt, William 47.5; 81.10-11; JL 7.33-9 ‘The Rose and Crown’ 81.10 Paperweights from Great Britain 84.12 Pellatt, Apsley 38.2; 82.6; 111.15-16; 132.15; 135.9; ‘The Sense of Taste’ (Mercier) 128.15 Pantin 65.11; 112.16 JL 1.4, 5; 3.4-15; 7.28; 10.66; ‘La Table Ronde’ (Philips) 122.10, 11 pedestal 114.18 PP 65 Pairpoint Manufacturing Company 106.12 ‘Poppy 1982’ 15.4 Apsley Pellatt on glass making 111.14-15 Palestine glassmaking 89.2 Royal Festival Hall 88.2 archaeological dig 62.3 Pall Mall pattern 120.16 sphinx SR 56 candlestick PP 11 Pallant House Museum, Chichester 25.4 St. Louis Crown 86.1 commemorative glasses JL 7.18 Palmer, Arlene: Glass in early America 77.10 Paul Stankard 120.15 Curiosities of Glassmaking 26A.1; 111.14; 123.15; Palmer, Kenneth Nicholls Venetian SR 60 130.17; SR 74 Ceremonial Barges on the River Thames 102.6 Ysart 67.13 family JL 3.4-15 panels, decorative glass 66.1-3; JL 6.9-11, 15, 16, 17 Paris 11.2; 45.8; 117.16; JL 11.77 Goblet PP 50 Art Deco 18.1 Duke of Bedford in JL 11.56-8, 69 ‘On the Comparative Heating Properties ...’ Contemporary 118.11 1867 International Exhibition JL 10.66 111.15-16 flared 131.15 1878 Exhibition JL 4.21-2; 6.54, 55; 10.47, price list, 1840 JL 2.7-8; 5.87, 88 Morris 106.17 49-51, 56 scent bottles 55.1; PP 64, 72-3 Pantin, Cristallerie de 65.11; 112.16 Museé des Arts Décoratifs 140.2, 3 service for Prince Regent PP 5, 10; 135.9 Paperweight Collectors’ Circle 124.9 Wallace in JL 10.46 Pender, James Dennison 49.4 29.5; ; 64.3; 65.11; 86.1; paperweights 59.1-3 Parkington, Michael Pennell, Ronald 70.1; 82.8; 108.12, 13 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 36 Pennsylvania 137.6-7 Pilkington, Sir Alistair 78.12; 104.3 ‘Admiral Sir Robert Mansell’ 134.16-17 Penrith 103.19 Pilkington Glass 15.6; 19.1; 76.8; 85.2; 104.15; collection 122.15 pens, glass 74.7; Ex. 14 110.11; 116.18 ‘The Portland Vase’ 121.13-14 pepper shakers 131.12-14 float process 124.20-1 ‘Ravenscroft’s invention of lead crystal revisited’ Pepys, Samuel 127.20; JL 138.10 Pilkington Museum 37.2, 7; 39.5; 41.6; 46.4; 58.9; 129.22 perfume see scent 62.4; 64.7; 83.11; Ex. 16 Pollock House Museum 13.3; 60.3 Perrin, Geddes & Co. 79.4, 10; 80.4; 83.5; 86.3; 95.6; stained glass 46.4 pollution 77.6 110.10; 129.29; 134.27; Ex. 21; JL 7.6 pillar glass 126.4 Pomona JL 6.57 Perrot, Bernard 55.2; 66.7; JL 4.84 pillar moulding JL 5.87 Pompeio, Vicenzo 92.3 Perry, Christopher Woodall pineapple glasses 117.10; 118.8; 135.9 pontils 103.10-11; 110.1, 3-4; 111.2 The Cameo Glass of Thomas and George Woodall pink glass 106.11 Poole, Dorset 140.9 123.20 pipes, glass PP 97, 99; SR 29 Poole, Julia E. Persia 7.2-3 Piper, John 25.2 ‘Contemporary glass in the Fitzwilliam Petrie, Kevin: Glass and Print 106.4 Pitfirran goblet 98.8 Museum’ 114.12-13 Petrie, William Flinders 79.3; 81.12 Pitt, William SR 52 ‘The Fitzwilliam Museum’ Col. 49-55 Petrie Museum 79.3 Pitt Rivers Museum 82.13 ‘Glass purchased for the household of the 4th Petrova & Olivie: Bohemian Glass 64.5 Pittsburgh 138.17, 19 Duke of Bedford’ 118.4-6; JL 11.37-76 Petrus 107.7 plaques JL 6.12, 18 ‘Through the looking-glass into the Old Bailey’ Petworth House 36.3 cameo 81.5; PP 91 127.14-19 pew heater 115.16 portrait 113.14; 132.15 porcelain 110.10; 136.15-16; 137.4, 26; pharmacy JL 1.33-45 plate glass 77.6; 109.5-8; 111.5; 116.13 JL 5.28, 29, 31; 7.32-3; 9.29 Philadelphia 120.1, 2, 13-15 French 45.8; 74.5 Library, Manchester 107.14 Philips, Charles Plesch, Peter Hariolf 63.8; 69.2; 132.30; 133.3; 134.4 Portland vase 50.6; 68.11; 97.14; 99.6, 7; ‘La Table Ronde’ 120.17-18; 122.10, 11 collection 76.2 121.13-14; JL 7.32; PP 8 Phillips, Edward, collection 131.3, 32 Plot, Robert 129.14-15; 130. 20; 131.24; The Breaking and Remaking of the Portland Vase Phillips, Howard 69.5-6; 140.2; Ex. 12-13 JL 2.73-4, 83; 8.38-53 44.5 Phillips, Jonas JL 2.53-7 Pohl, Wilhelm JL 44.66, 79 broken 33.5-6; PP 23 Phillips reception 51.1-2 Pohlmann, Stephen repaired 42.6; 44.7 Philippe, Joseph: Glass: History and Art 25.3 ‘Masonic Beilbys’ 127.12-13 replicas 99.1; 100.2; 106.3 138.21; JL 6.54-5, 60 Phipps, Claudia 108.13, 14 ‘Outside the comfort zone’ 122.16 portrait plaques Phoenicians 132.9 ‘The Tilly glasses’ 139.5-7 Louis XIV 113.14 Phoenix Glass Company 106.12 126.6-10 Napoleon 132.15 Phoenix glasshouse 16.2; 138.17 Pocals/pokals 102.1, 5 portraits (engraved on glass or modelled) 90.4-5; JL 4.84-101; 7.15, 72 Silesian 126.12-13; 132.13 112.8-9 photography 113.18; 118.14; Polak, Ada 27.5; 125.12 Queen Alexandra SR 52 microphotography 125.4-6 Gammelt Norsk Glass 24.1-2 Queen Anne 92.8, 11 Pickersgill, F.R. 104.1 Glass, its Makers and its Public 92.2, 3 Biedermeier 13.1 pickle jar SR 56 Modern Glass JL 8.88 by Biemann 13.1; 102.5-6 pier glasses 104.6; 113.17; 114.16; 116.13; 130.28 Pollard, Alyson Burns SR 48 Hampton Court 37.4-5 ‘National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside’ cameos 66.8 Pijzel-Dommisse, Jet 140.3 Col. 57-64 Charlemagne 104.1, 14; 105.11 Pilkington, Alan Roger Douglas 134.30-1 Pollock-Hill, Stephen 125.20 Disraeli PP 38 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 37 Edward VII SR 52 Powers, A. E. 20.3 Pugh glasshouse JL 2.37-49; 7.50-2 Einstein 8.2 Pre-Raphaelites 18.1; 76.3; 108.17 Pugin 98.10-11 flutes 94.12 Prescot glassworks 88.3 Pulvey, Rosalind Ernst Herzog 102.1, 5 pressed glass 23.3; 26A.1; 42.6; 45.1; 61.10-11; ‘Thomas Bowrey and the Bowles Glasshouse’ William Kelly 97.7 67.11; 71.6; 78.7; 85.9; 92.11; 96.2; 99.11; 129.19-21 Princess Louise SR 56 111.17; SR 54-7 Punch and Judy PP 32 Mary, Princess of Orange 4.2 American 59.8; 138.17-18; SR xii punch-bowls 106.3; 124.17, 18; 131.16; Peter Morgan 105.18 books on 45.5-6 135.24; 138.18; Col. 26, 45 Pitt SR 52 English 11.4-5; 255.2-3; 38.7 punty marks 101.11 Porträtgläser 20.3-4; 33.7 identification 45.4-5; 57.6 Purser, Ernest JL 6.33-4, 40 Nelson 90.5; 107.9 Victorian 83.11 Pye, John JL 4.9, 18 Russian Royal family SR 53 press-moulded glass 96.9-10; 109.14; 122.6-8; ‘Pyramid’ SG 72 Schiller SR 59 123.14-15; CS 12-13, 14-15; PP 7-8, 78, 79 Pyrex 48.3, 139.12-15, 16; ships 127.7; 135.22 Irish SR 57 JL 6.32, 33-5, 40, 41, 42; SR 66 Jonathan Swift 120 13, 14 priapic glasses 83.9, 10; 97.7 pyrometer 104.2 by Tassie 66.8; 68.4 Price, Jennifer and Sally Cottam pyxides 131.9; 138.13 Wolryche Fool 101.10 Romano-British Glass Vessels 85.6 see also Jacobite portraits Price, Richard W. portraits (paintings) 101.10 Beyond Venice 104.9-10 Charles I 112.13 price-lists Dutch 112.13 Apsley Pellatt JL 2.7-8; 5.87, 88 Q Jacobite 112.13 1770s 111.10-11 QAC (Queen Alexandra College) Glass 48.4 Wolryche Fool 98.9 prices 98.2; 101.15-16 Quezal 130.17 Portuguese glass 98.6 18c. JL 11.54, 66-76 quiz 53.3/7; Ex. 9-10 Portwall Lane glasshouse 110.15 flint glass, 19c. JL 5.79, 84 posset glasses and pots 20.3; 71.1, 4; 106.4, 18; group sale 111.18

107,17; 108.8; 112.5-6; 128.2, 16-20; see also bills 131.19, 20; Col. 26, 45-6; DJ 51; Prince Rupert drops SR 68 JL 5.35-60, 66, 67 printing on glass JL 3.16-30 S-sealed 67.1-3; 69.2; 71.4 Glass and Print 106.4 R postcards 129.17-18 printmaking 106.4 Raglan Castle 95.9 posy holders PP 77, 84 3D 139.4 railway, US SR 46 pottery see ceramics privateer glasses 62.5; 82.1, 5; 86.11; 88.11; 97.13; Railway glasses 42.4 Potsdam JL 6.13 108.16; 118.17-18; 121.20; railway lanterns 139.12 Pourbus, Pieter Col. 9, 17, 18, 34, 40, 43; DJ 46 Rakow, Juliette K. 30.5; 45.7 ‘An Allegory of True Love’ 133.16-17 fakes 132.6 Rakow, Leonard S. 30.5 powder compact SR 60 Glittering Prizes 132.25-6 obituary JL 6.59 Powell, Harry J. 68.5/13; 79.3; ; 125.13, 25; 133.6; Project Cristallo 140.8-14 Rakow, Leonard S. and Juliette K. 135.16; PP 28, 30 prunts 115.4-5 ‘Joseph Locke’ JL 6.54-67 Glass-Making in England 139.22; JL 7.56, 64 pub glassware Rakow collection 30.5; 45.7 Powell, James & Sons 3 9.4; 55.8; 61.13; 65.1-2; badged 110.18 Rakow Commission 46.5; 56.8 66.7; 67.5; JL 11.103-12; PP 28, 29, 30, 37, 66 glasses 80.5; 108.18 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 38 Rakow Research Library 138.25 Reflections on Glass (NEAGC) 57.5; 65.10 Ricketts, Henry 138.8 Ranking Glass 111.5 Reformation 75.9; 137.13 Ricketts family 16.2; JL 4.84-101; PP 60 ratafia glasses 98.9; Col. 10-13, 15, 20, 21, 35, 58, 59; Regency glass services 79.3 Rider, John Charles 22.1, 3-4; 24.6 97.8; DJ 46 reliquary 98.1 Riedel 128.14-15 Ratcliffe 62.3; 108.1, 2-7; 110.15 Renaissance 8.5; 36.4; 68.2-3; 69.8; 75.7; 129.15; Riedel, Claus-Joseph 84.9 Ravenhead Company 86.14 133.21; PP 59 Riedel, Franz 139.5, 9 Raven’s head seal 69.6; 92.3; 106.7; 129.14, 15; glass recipes 97.10; 128.29-30 Riedel family JL 11.92 134.31; 135.13; SR xi Rendel, Rosemary Riemerschmid, Richard JL 7.57 Ravenscroft, George 46.6; Col. 34; ‘Who was George Ravenscroft?’ JL 2.65-70 Riley-Smith Glass Collection 23.3 JL 1.10, 47; 2.65-70; 5.62 repair of glass objects 108.14-15; 125.17; 126.3; Rimmel, Eugène JL 1.59 and discovery of lead crystal glass 11.1; 44.9; 137.5 rinsers 56.2-3; 58.6-7; 85.9; 86.4 48.8; CS 8-9/11; 110.2; 114.1; 129.22; deceptive 131.25-6 for wine glasses 122.17 131.24; 134.2, 16 reproductions 84.2-3 Ripon cathedral 93.12 de Gidts on 134.2; Noble on 129.12-15; and fakes JL 9.26, 71-4; 11.103-12 Ritchie Flint Glass Works 138.19 130.20-1; Rendell on JL 2.65-70; Smith on Jacobite JL 9.62-3, 70, 73, 11.7-36 Ritsema van Eyck, P. C. 116.8; Watts on 114.2-4; 115.2, 116.8-9; Williamite JL 9.69-70, 71 Glass in the Rijkmuseum 66.6; 69.11 130.17-19; 131.31; 135.3-4; JL 2.71-84 Roman glass 105.2 Rivenhall Church 70.5 family memorial 3.1 Russian glass 94.14 Robertson, Ian, collection 133.30 and Henley 12.4; 134.4-5 twisted stems 81.4/9 Robinson, Michael: ‘Irish commemorative glass’ 10.1 and looking-glass 132.24 restoration of glass 17.3; 66-5; 108.14-15; 125.17; rock crystal 3.2-3; 27.4-5; 136.13-14, 16; JL 10.51-2 portrait 134.4 126.3 1878-1925 JL 4.20-45 productions 69.2; 72.1, 2/5; 73.1, 2-3; 92.2, 3; Restoration period 17.4; 99.8; 111.5, 6; 114.2 Rockingham, 2nd Marquess of 135.22, 23-4 114.1; 135.13, 20 reverse painting on glass 3.3; 99.14; 110.2; 112.6-7; Rockingham Goblet 131.19; 135.24; SR 45 posset pot 69.2; 106.4, 18; 107.17 JL 4.46-63; SR 64, 65 Rococo JL 4.25 roemer 115.3 Chinese 108.17; 112.6 roemers (rummers) 104.18; 107.8, 16; 115.5-6; spittoon 134.35 Jacobite 88.9 127.20; 129.7; 130.19; 131.16; 133.30; 134.31; recipes, glass 126.18-21; SR ix, xi, 1 Reynolds, Eric DJ 49; JL 11.81 colours JL 2.9; 7.32 ‘The glass of John Walsh Walsh’ 84.4-5 ‘Four Seasons’ 4.2-3 flint JL 2.5-6; 10.37-8 The glass of John Walsh Walsh’ 80.11; 81.2 mammoth PP 33 lead crystal 105.3; SR xi Reyntiens, Patrick 123.16; 134.35-6 from Netherlands 83.10 Renaissance 97.10; 128.29-30 Rheinbach Glass Museum 103.8, 9 Rummers 135.25-6 ruby JL 9.52-7 Rhenish 94.6, 8 Sunderland Bridge PP 36 recycling 24.2; 92.14; 122.9; 131.27 rib-moulding 128.22-3 rolling-pins 43.1; Col. 4-5, 9, 14, 20; bottle banks 13.1 Richards, Barry, collection 58.3 PP 60, 61, 97; SR 47 red Richards, Henry 62.3 Roman Britain, glass in 2.4 ‘Shades of red’ JL 9.41-58 Richardson, Henry G. & Sons JL 6.54, 55 Roman glass 54.5; 58.7, 8; 59.4; 100.22; 128.25, 26; ‘Shades of red: gold ruby glass’ 91.9 Richardson, W.H.B. and J PP 22, 23, 26, 27, 75 130.7; 131.7, 9-11; 132.5; 133.3, 7-11, 26; ‘Shades of red: the problems of ruby glass’ letters JL 10.34-43 JL 4.20-45; 10.51; SR x 75.8-9 Richardson, W.H.B. and J. beads 132.9-10 see also copper-red; cranberry glass; ruby glass price list JL 2.7, 8 blown glass 67.4 Red House Glass Museum 18; 39.1; 83.10; 101.3; Richardson Cutting Shop 136.4 burial group 69.1 138.22; 139.20-1 Richmond glass JL 7.40-3, 45, 46, 47, 49 cage cup 13.1 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 39 cameo vases 121.1, 6-7 106.16; 113.1; 126.26; PP 40 sake cup SR 71 Dionysian 130.7 Royal Oak goblet 120.13 salad bowls PP 67, 78, 79 claret jug 26Jy.4; 27.4-5 Royal Society (Society of Arts) 26Jy.2, 4; JL 1.11 sale legislation 139.4 at Colchester 2.4; 23.1 ruby glass 75.8-9; 81.5; 10.36, 40-1; 106.11, 12; salt shakers 131.12-14 Glass of the Caesars 40.4, 5 107.15; 124.22; 129.30; 135.19; 136.16; animal-shaped 111.12 luxury JL 7.71-2, 73 Col. 61-2; JL 7.33-7; PP 97 Columbus pair 112.8 mould-blown 138.11-15 chimneys JL 2.39 Salter, Edward 129.12; 130.17 in Museum of London 69.11 copper JL 9.41-58 Salter, John: Boudoir Labels 131.28 reproducing 105.2 making JL 9.50-2 ‘The Interface between Silver and Glass’ Sasanian 106.6 recipes JL 9.52-7 115.10-13 stained 135.17-18 gold- 91.9 Wine Labels 1730-2003 105.15 Whithorn 76.4 JL 6.8-19; 7.36; 10.36, 38, 39 saltpetre 75.2; 130.19 Rookwood goblet 110.6 shaded see Amberina; Burmese glass salts 102.4; Col. 13; JL 11.82 Roscoe, William Col. 36, 38 Rudebeck, Andrew 105.13 cameo PP 86 Rosebery, Earls of 87.8-9; 88.4 Rudoe, Judy Glass Sellers’ 135.27 Rosebery collection 87.8, 9; 88.4 Decorative Arts, 1850-1950 52.5 salvers 102.7; 104.7; 107.14; 125.23-5; DJ 51 Rose, J. A. H. JL 3.9 ‘Glass from 1850-1950 in the British Museum’ footed 45.5-6 ‘The Apsley Pellatts’ JL 3.4-15 JL 7.53-66 55.8; Col. 5, 33 Ross, Catherine: ‘The flint glass houses on the rivers ‘A survey of 19th and 20th century glass in the San Francisco 132.14 Tyne and Wear’ JL 5.75-85 British Museum’ 44.3-4 sand 76.9; 106.11; 129.12; Ex. 17 Rossi, Sara Rugely 61.13 sandblasting 66.2 ‘Paperweights ... 1842-1860’ 80.3 rum jog SR 41 Sanders, John V. Rosthchild family 140.28 rummers see roemers ‘Changes in the Stourbridge glass industry Rowlandson, Thomas JL 7.4-5 Rush, James: The Ingenious Beilbys 92.2 1974-2004’ CS 15-18 Doctor Syntax in the Glass House 38.1 Ruskin, John Col. 20, 21, 39, 44-5, 60 Sang, Jacob 26A.4; Col. 9; 92.3, 6; 130.8-9, 22, 23, The Second Tour of Doctor Syntax JL 7.4-14 The Stones of Venice 77.1; 78.2, 3 24; Royal Albert Hall 79.7; PP 36 Ruskin Glass Centre CS 17; 101.1 132.25; 136.22; 137.20-1; 138.4; Crystal 39.1; 45.7; 67.4; 74.2; 75.11; Russell, Edward 87.6-7 JL 7.57-8; 8.79 80.4; 82.7, 13; 83.10; 86.14; CS 15, 18; 101.3; Russell, Rachel 40.1; 66.5 baluster 130.8-10 110.5 Russia 24.2 A Concise Catalogue of signed Jacob Sang Goblets Royal Coat of Arms SR 48, 68 Russian glass 45.7; 46.5; 94.14 67.8; 137.20-1 Royal Collections 83.5; 86.3; 112.13; 120.17-18 Russian Royal family SR 53 Sarpellan, Giovanni at Buckingham Palace 95.6; 120.17; Ex. 21 Ryser, Frieder 110.2 Art and Glass 52.2 ‘George III & Queen Charlotte’ exh. 100.15 Miniatur di vetro 49.5 Royal Festival Hall 88.2 Sasanian glass 106.6-7 Royal glass 73.1; 80.4-5; 82.4; 86.3; 95.5; 98.8; Sattin, Gerald 76.12 PP 57 sauce boat SR 41, 42 Beilby armorial 127.7, 9; 135.22-4 Savoy glasshouse 73.1; Col. 20 Danish 68.6; 72.10; 82.5 S Savoy vase 73.1 sack 94.6, 8 finger bowls and rinsers 53.8; 56.2-4 Saxon glass 4.3; 107.1, 7, 8; 110.8, 15 safety 77.6; 131.5 Royal Glass factory, La Granja 93.4-5 Anglo-Saxon glass 100.22; 116.3-5 see also danger; Health and Safety Royal marriages / weddings 72.10; 82.5; 101.18; Saxony JL .32-3 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 40 Scandinavian glass 108.11 scientific glass 93.12 ‘The Jacobite engravers’ JL 3.40-78 Royal 68.6 Scotland 109.4 The Jacobites and their Drinking Glasses 61.7; Studio glass 11.2 Dumfries House 116.13 62.5; 63.6; 90.7 see also countries Forth Bridge 42.4; PP 88 3rd edition 138.29-30 Scarpara, Julia L. Linlithgow Palace 75.9 Seddon, Laura 54.3 Aperçus de l’histoire de la verrierie 33.6-7 National Museums 63.9; 78.3; 79.4; 111.14; collection 9.1; 68.8 scent containers 110.12-13; 111.17; 114.16; 127.28 ; Col. 17-24 death 66.11 119.17-18; 123.17; 129.25; ÓBroin 105.6-7 Seguso, Archimede 133.6, 8-9 Col. 15; DJ 52-3; PP 70, 72; SR 41, 43, 51; weights and measures in 102.11-12 Seguso, Livio 23.2; 24.1 JL 1.58-64; 3.30; 7.27, 28 see also Edinburgh; Glasgow; Scottish glass servants, provision for 131.3-4 Apsley Pellatt 55.1; PP 64, 72-3 Scott, J. R. and J. K. Crellin: ‘Glass and British services / table settings 85.4; 100.13; 140.3 at Bristol 65.4 pharmacy 1600-1900’ JL 1.33-45 Baccarat 86.3 Bristol blue 134.31 Scott, John Darnell 109.9 cameo glass PP 86; 126.22 ‘Robert Charleston JL 8.17 Londonderry 71.11; 79.3; PP 16 Chinese 115.16 Scott Goblet 8.3 press-moulded 138.18 Drom 54.3 Scottish glass 3.4; 24.5-6; 74.4; 94.9; 125.20-1 for Prince Regent 5.10; 83.5; 110.10; 135.9; Geddes PP 16 Art 50.8 PP5, 10 (Mrs) French’s collection 68.8; Ex. 14 87.3; 89.14 Regency 79.3 Perfume and Flagons 34.5 Newbattle House 96.6 Scandinavian 68.6 Perfume and Pomanders 40.8 see also Jacobite glass Victorian 80.4 phial 124.22 Scottish Glass Society 63.10; 124.9; 127.28 Warrington JL 9.23 pocket 122.23 Scottish History Society 54.6-7; 55.7-8; 87.9 Seton Veitch collection 108.18; 109.2, 12 Roman 138.13 Scottish National Portrait Gallery 128.4 Shaftesbury bowl 104.15 swan’s head 68.6; 106.16; Ex. 14 Scottish Union with England 69.9; 71.9; 101.6 shakers 131.12-15 Thomas Webb PP 58 screen SR 60, 61 enamelled 131.14, 15 uranium PP 37 scrollwork DJ 44, 45, 47, 48 Shakespeare, William JL 5.55-6 Victorian 72.15 sculptures, glass 8.2; 118.11; 125.14-16; 128.24 shards 108.2 scent sprays 110.12-13 American 31.2 shear marks 103.10-12 Schmid, Edward T.: Beginning Glassblowing 88.14 at Broadfield House 75.2 shears, parrot-nose 104.11 Schmidt, Johann Wolfgang JL 6.9, 11, 17 Chihuly chandelier 81.3 Sheedie, J. SR 66 Schmidt, Robert: Das Glas 92.3 ‘Endless Column’ 54.2 Shepherd, John and Angela Wardle Schneider, Christian Gottfried 126.13; 127.4; 136.8 by Martunuzzi 53.3; Ex. 9 The Glass Workers of Roman London 122.22 Scholda, Ulrike sealed glasses DJ 35 shepherd’s crook, glass SR 29 ‘The Adolf Loos drinking set’ 127.23-4 seals, glass 39.4; 69.2 Sheppard, Christopher 137.27 ‘The Patrician drinking set’ 124.5 seals for bottles 138.9 ‘The lasting influence of Venice on the design of ‘Viennese glass in Greek style’ 133.12-15 Seath, Robert JL 9 English glass’ 63.3-4, Addendum Schott, Otto 30.7; 139.16 Secession 127.23; 128.11-15 Shinagawa glassworks 134.32-3 Schroder, Timothy seconds 33.8 Shinrone furnace 98.5 Renaissance and Baroque Silver 129.32 Seddon, Geoffrey B. 60.3; 64.10; 65.7; 126.3-4 ships 85.12 Schwanhardt, Georg JL 6.11, 16, 17 ‘Amen glasses’ 12.2-3; JL 5.4-14 decanters 101.4-6; 134.6-11; SR 2 Schwinde, Arlene Palmer, Cleo Witt and Cyril ‘The engraving on the ‘Amen’ glasses’ JL 5.15-26 engraved on glass 4.3; 101.4-6; 127.7; 135.22; Weedon: Bristol Glass 54.11 ‘Introduction to Jacobite glass’ JL 9.62-3 137.19; DJ 47, 49; SR 44 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 41 ship’s glasses 127.5; 128.4; 129.3-4; 131.29; Smart Brothers, Stourbridge 84.1 snuff mull DJ 52 134.3 smashing glasses 57.8-9; JL 9.13 Soane, Sir John 103.13 shipwrecked glass 7.5; 20.2; 106.14; 128.6-9 Smit, Frans G.A.M. 8.2; 42.5; 63.10; 67.8 Society of Antiquaries 96.1, 4-5; Ex. 22 see also privateer glasses. The Art of Glass on Stamps 39.6; 67.8 Society for Glass Technology 30.1; 55.9; 124.9; Shirley, Frederick S. 106.11-12; 138.19 A Concise Catalogue of signed Jacob Sang Goblets 127.3 shooting glass 70.11-12 67.8; 137.20-1 soda glass 101.11; 104.2-3; 125.22; 127.4; 134.4; Shore, Walter Col. 34, 47, 62-3 death 82.6 Col. 7; DJ 41, 42, 50; SR ix, x Shrine of St. Patrick’s Bell JL 10.51, 62 Frans Greenwood ... Glass Engraver 42.5; 43.7; Sotheby’s 107.13; 112.4; Col. 14, 28; DJ 14 Shugborough Hall 64.11 67.8; 92.2, 6 auctions/sales 101.15, 16; 102.16-17; 104.15, Shuttleworth, Sir Jerome 84.16 A stippled goblet in Kulturen Lund 67.8 16, 17; 105.16; 107.17-18; 109.13, 18; Shuttleworth family 52.8; Ex. 10 Strange & Rare 42.5 111.17-18 glass bills 84.1 Uniquely Dutch 18th cent. stipple-engravings on Fine British and European Ceramics and Glass sickening glass 118.3 Glass 55.3; 57.8; 67.8; 126.11, 12 110.16-17 see also crisseling/crizzelling Smith, Andrew 101.8; 105.5 GC Reception 50.1-2 Sidonian glassmakers 29.2 Smith, E. Ann 34.6 House of Hanover glass 105.1, 12, 13 Silesian glass 136.12, 13-14 Smith, James 37.2 sales policy 53.7 pokals 126.12-13; 132.13 Smith, John P. 84.7 Sotheby’s Concise Encyclopaedia of Glass 74.12 stems 71.5; 82.1,11; 93.6; 104-6; 109.12-13; Chairman’s letters [regular series] Southampton 107.7; 140.9 110.9; 111.10 ; 126.5; DJ 24-5, 27 ‘Geometry on the dining table’ 135.9-11 Southwark 92.14; Ex. 18 silica 104.2-3, 12; 105.2; 129.12, 14; 130.17, 20 ‘Glass for rich Victorians’ 46.3 GC walk round 63.7; 64.10; 65.6 silicon 106.10 ‘James Tassie’ 66.8; 68.4 glasshouses 62.2-3; 76.5/7; 96.8; 97.14 silver 80.6; 115.10-13; 132.20-1; Ex. 18 ‘Julia Báthory’ 135.20-1 see also Falcon glassworks dessert 104.6 ‘Modeles et tailes de Cristaux Anglais’ souvenirs 42.3-4; 80.7 mounts 91.1, 6-7; 133.20 JL 11.77-90 Roman 138.14-15 silver-decorated glass 117.13 Osler’s Crystal 51.3 Sovanka, Istvan 121.15 silvered glass PP 89 ‘Paperweight sale of the century’ 123.18 Sowerby Glass 35.8; 70.12; 71.6; 73.15; silvering 109.6, 7; 134.12-15 ‘Paul Oppitz’ JL 10.64-75 PP 38, 41, 42, 43, 72, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78, 79, 84 silversmiths 110.4 ‘Piss-pots, basins & spittoons’ 128.27-8 soy frames 115.10-11, 12-13 silverware 121.4 ‘Ravenscroft’s discovery of English lead crystal’ spa-water bottles DJ 24 Simon, André: The History of Champagne 99.8 116.8 space shuttle 25.4 ‘Singing glasses’ (‘flip-flops’) 137.7 DCW’s response 116.8-9 Spain 121.5; 133.19 Singleton Parish Church 13.1 ‘The White House’ 139.20-1 Spanish glass 60.3; 93.1, 4-5; 94.14; 99.2 Sir John Soane Museum103.13 Smith, Sheenah books about 93.5 Skelcher, Barrie: The Big Book of Vaseline Glass 97.9 ‘Glass in 18th century Norwich’JL 2.49-64 collections 93.5 Skinkel’s JL 22.50 Smith, Walter JL , collection 101.15, 16; 128.23 specie jars JL 1.34-6, 42, 45; SR 68 Slack, Raymond 80.2: English Pressed Glass 38.7 Smith, William JL 11.48-50, 63, 75 spectacles 126.18-19 Slade, Felix 4.3; 54.7; Col. 10; Smollett, Tobias JL 1.13 Spiegl, Walter JL 7.53; 8.70-87, 105 Smyth, John SR 43 (with R. von Strasser) Dekoriertes Glas 49.5 slag glass 116.11-12; 139.18; SR xii, 56, 57 snails 73.10; 75.6 Spillman, Jane Shadel 80.2; 138.25 Slater, Graham 139.19 Snodin, Michael and John Styles in The Elegant Epergne 102.7 slave trade 92.14; 97.8 Design and the Decorative Arts 100.12-13 European Glass Furnishings for Eastern Palaces Sloane, Sir Hans Col. 2 snuff bottles 114.16 108.7; 110.3, 15 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 42 Glass from World’s Fairs 35.9 at Manchester 68.8; Ex. 14 steam roller, glass 110.13 ‘Memories of Robert Charleston JL 8.17 medieval 31.3-4; 135.17-19 Stevenson, Muriel Mt. Washington & Pairpoint Glass 103.7; of William Morris 15.2; 56.4-5 ‘Jacobite clubs’ JL 8.18-25 106.11-12; 129.26 Pilkington 46.4 stems 85.4; 104.6; 109.12-13; 115.4-5; 126.5; spirit barrel 110.18 Pre-Raphaelite 104.17 DJ 27, 33 spittoons 117.8; 128.27-8; 134.35 roundel 104.1, 17; 105.13 Anglo-Venetian period DJ 27 Spode Museum JL 10.54 in Sir John Soane’s Museum 103.13 composite DJ 44 sponges, glass 140.15-19 at V&A 106.9 cut shank 109.12 sports 128.2, 3 windows 8.1; 13.1; 14.1; 15.5; 25.1; 50.5; 81.10- facet cut 109.8, 12; shooting 70.11-12 11; 89.1, 12; 90.9; 102.8; 104.14, 16; 106.16; Col. 10; DJ 27, 29, 45, 47-8, 49, 50 Sporting Clubs JL 9.9, 13 108.1; 110.7; 128.32; 137.10-13; hollow Col. 1, 18, 23, 31, 39, 62; SR 17-19 see also Hunt Clubs; hunting glasses SR 66 incised Col. 13, 22, 26, 27 Spottiswood AMEN 50.1 aesthetic 108.17 pedestal 71.5; Col. 3, 10, 17, 18, 23, 35, 45, 54; spouted glasses 108.8; 109.9 Barnardo’s 84.15 DJ 43, 48, 50, 51 sprinklers SR 62 Bedford churches 52.7-8; Ex. 8/10 see also air-twist stems; balusters; opaque sputum flasks 125.26 Bible stories 53.4 twist stems; Silesian glass; twisted stems; St Alban’s Abbey 50.5 Burne-Jones 18.1; 66.11; 76.3 wrythen stems St Gobain glassworks 45.8 Chagall 60.2 Stennett-Wilson, Ronald 100.14; 105.18; 122.18-19; St Helens glassworks Museum see World of Glass by Harry Clark 47.6; 105.13 123.17 St ouis factory, France SR xi-xii Cornwall 73.9 stethoscope, glass 93.12; 94.14 Staal, Cyril: ‘Mirrors’ 14.2 Dorset and Wiltshire 44.1-2 Steuben Glass 31.6; 32.8; 33.8; 63.Add.; 101.18; Staffordshire 140.12-13 showing glassmaking 82.11 102.7; 139.17 Staffordshire Crystal 52.9 hats in 104.1, 14; 105.11 factory 128.31; 131.32 stained glass 47.5; 54.8; 55.9; 64.11; 65.6; Lincolnshire 94.4 Royal wedding presents 95.6; 113.1; Ex. 21 Col. 14; JL 7.32-4 Oundle 73.7; 110.7 Stephens, William 98.6 in architecture 53.5 Oxford 61.9 Stevens and Williams 12.6; 27.3-4; 56.1; JL 7.19; Arts and Crafts movement 129.23-4 Piper 25.2; 73.7 PP 7, 66, 71, 81, 85, 86, 87, 90, 91, 93 Arts and Crafts Stained Glass 138.27-9 Pugin 98.10-11 pattern-book JL 2.9 blowing 109.11 solar-powered 93.12 rock crystal JL 4.21-3, 25-6, 34, 35, 36, 44, 45 books on 103.15 St. Albans Abbey 50.5 Stewart, Max Frank Brangwyn (DVD) 125.27 St. Giles, Edinburgh 108.9 ‘Almaric Walter’ 125.14-16 cartoons 137.27 Strawberry Hill 67.12 Stiegel, Henry William 138.16. 18 at Chelmsford 70.5 Tiffany 52.7; 138.24-5; Ex. 8 Stiegel glass 59.4; 65.10; 66.9; 71.12; 98.8 Brian Clarke 56.9 V&A 137.10-13 stipple-engraved glass 4.3; 8.2; 28.1; 32.3; 55.3; conservation 31.3-4; 56.6/9 York 35.4 93.14; 126.1; 138.10; Col. 31 at Ely 64.10; 71.11 Stained Glass Research Centre, Switzerland 110.2 A stippled goblet in Kulturen Lund 67.8 Fulham glasshouse 94.5 stamps 39.6; 67.8; SR 75 Uniquely Dutch 18th cent. stipple-engravings on Gazeteer of Irish Stained Glass 43.6 Stankard, Paul 120.15 Glass 55.3; 57.8; 67.8; 126.11, 12 German 113.2 Stanton Wick glassworks 83.3-4 stipple engraving Col. 3, 12, 22, 29, 45, 56, 52; JL 9 heraldic 86.3 Star Glass company 113.13 Stobart, Jane: Printmaking for Beginners 106.4 Irish 43.6 State barges 102.6 Stockholm JL 1.22-3 leading 109.8 State drinking glasses 96.8 stools SR 69 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 43 storage jar SR 66 premises 139.20 The 100 Best Stained Glass Sites in London 140.27 Storr, Paul 98.14 Stuart and Sons PP 86; 110.13 Sweden 68.6; 108.11 Story of Glass, The (CD-Rom) 63.Addendum; 67.6-7 Studio Glass 24.2-3; 27.1-2, 5; 28.6; 70.2; 72.11; Swedish bottles 112.9 Stourbridge 118.1; 130. 28; 138.22 83.11; 84.15; 125.9; SG 70-1 Sweeny Flint Glass Works 138.18, 19 JL 4.20-6; 10.35 American movement 110.7 sweetmeat glasses 47.3; 112.5-6; 118.18; bottlemakers 35.1-2 Baker on 71.3 128.2, 16-20, 21-3; 131.19, 20; DJ 48-9; PP 69 canal 133.31; 138.20, 22 in Britain CS 19-20 covered 84.6 cave 102.10 British 101.1; 136.22-3; JL 8.88-105 see also dessert; jelly glasses; Collection 138.20; 139.20 craft or art? 71.3-4 posset glasses and pots cut glass 99.12-13 in Ireland 126.25 sweetmeat trees see epergnes factories 103.1 Layton on 57.1, 2-3; 70.8; 130.14-16, 26; Swinburne, Elizabeth 74.1, 10 gadgets 103.12 136.22-3 syllabub 128.17, 18-19, 21 GC visit 27.3; 48.1-2 Littleton and 129.27; 134.5 glasses 15.4-5; 20.3; 112.5-6; 117.1, 18; 128.16- glass course 48.7 1960-2000 94.10 20, 21; 131.19; DJ 51, 52; Glass Festivals 101.10; 130.15-16 Scandinavian 11.2 JL 5.35, 36, 38-9, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 60-3 glassmakers, 1612-2002 96.12-13 style 115.2-6; 124.12-13 Syrian ash 126.19 Government School of Art 113.16 Celtic JL 10.50-2 19c. 52.9 Greek 133.12-15 1974-2004 CS 15-18 Nailsea 138.9; JL 5.87 trade 7.1-2 sugar basins/bowls DJ 51; PP 35, 68, 73, 76, 77, 78; website 94.14 SR 41 T see also Broadfield House Irish SR 57 table, glass 110.15; 111.2 Strange, Sir Robert 102.7; 125.20; 126.4 sugar crushers 140.20-3 table decorations 114.16 ‘Strange and Rare’ exh. 35.10; 36.1-2; 37.7; 39.1-3; sugar shakers 131.12, 13 table fountains 84.13; 86.4 40.9; 41.4, 6; 92.11; 117.15; DJ 15 Sullivan, Catherine 34.6 table settings see services catalogue 40.10; DJ 15; SR 1-75 Summerly, Felix 26Jy.2-3 Tabley House 92.8 Strasser, Rudolf von 82.2 Sunderland 70.2; 7.15-16, 20; 10.45; Tait, Audrey 115.6 book on Biedermeiers 7.5 JL 6.32-3, 39 Tait, Gerald Hugh collection 93.6; 129.4 Bridge 87.11; DJ 49; JL 7.15, 20; PP 36, 60, 97 5000 Years of Glass 132.28 Strawberry Hill 67.12; 77.1 Jobling and Co. 34.1-2 and Aldrevandinus Beaker 107.2, 5, 9 strawberry set SR 27 Museum 58.3; 61.11; 63.11; 68.11; 69.4; 109.9 death and tributes 103.2, 3-5, 8; 104.4-5 street lights 76.5/7, 8, 9; 99.1, 8-9 Regency glass 79.3 ‘Felix Slade’ JL 8.70-87 Stringer, Jack see also National Glass Centre Five Thousand Years of Glass 52.5; 63.4; 83.8 ‘John Benjamin Dancer’ 125.4-6 glasses 52.8; Ex. 10 The Golden Age of Venetian Glass 104.3, 14; 107.5 ‘Optical glass’ 10.1 Suntory Museum of Art ‘The ‘Luck of Edenhall’‘ 54.9-11; 66.12 Stuart, David Drinking Glass 134.34 obituary of Leonard S. Rakow JL 6.59 death 74.10 Surr, Thomas JL 4.8 ‘The perilous path of collecting Venetian glass’ ‘Masonic glass’ 47.1-2 Surrey 65.7 68.2-3 ‘Masonic glass in England’ JL 8.38-53 Sussex: GC visits 36.3; 133.29 President of GC 77.4 ‘The ‘Success to the Society’ Jacobite glasses’ 59.5 Sussex, Augustus Frederic, Duke of PP 13; 103.14 ‘Some Anglo-Dutch glass in the British Museum’ Stuart Crystal 39.1; 45.7; 69.7; 103.1; 108.10; Swansea (Glynn-Vivian) Museum 59.2 4.2-3 111.13; 112.18; 118.3; 138.22; CS 16 Swash, Caroline INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 44 The Waddesdon Bequest 54.11 tea drinking 80.4 115.3, 4, 5; 127.13; 131.6 tampers 72.15 Teague, Walter Dorwin JL 7.59, 66 ‘The Hoare bills for glass’ JL 1.10-17 tankards 74.8; 108.8; 109.9; 138.18; DJ 49; tektites 24.1 ‘The origins of the Circle of Glass Collectors’ JL 1.32 telescopes JL 1.11 JL 1.7-9 enamelled 110.4 Temple Newsam Museum 104.7 Thwaite Colliery SR 43 tapersticks DJ 50; PP 74 Tennant, Norman H.: The Conservation of Glass and Tichborne, R. C. SR 55 tapestry pattern bowl 115.16 Ceramics 82.9-10 Tieze, Franz 51.4; 69.10; Tarporley Hunt Club 71.11; 86.4; 88.4; 101.11; terraced foot DJ 45, 50, 51 JL 2.38, 44, 45, 47; 7.50-2 115.15; JL 9.16-18, 20 tesserae 4.1; 107.7; 116.12; 135.17 Tiffany, Louis Comfort 104.8; 112.2; 139.17 venues JL 9.8 gold 126.21 44.6; 64.9; 96.13, 14; 102.7; 108.16; Tarshis, Dena K. 101.5 manufacture 126.21 135.16; JL 7.55-6, 63 obituary 120.3 Theophilus JL 7.7 The Dream Garden 120.2, 15 Objects of Fantasy 104.11 De Diversis Artibus JL 1.18-19 lamps 14.1; 15.6; 64.9; 78.11 Tassie, James 64.10; 66.8; 68.4; 97.6-7 Theuerkauff-Liederwald, Anna-Elizabeth 68.1, 2 mosaics 120.2, 15 Tassies 97.6-7 Thomas, Edward: poem 94.5 windows 52.7; 138.24-5; Ex. 8 miniatures 66.8 Thomas, Ron 74.9; 97.11; 116.16; 132.30 Tilly glasses 139.5-6 pastes 109.4 collection 116.16-18; 117.17; 137.20-1 Tissington Hall 92.8 Taste 82.5; 104.7; 110.18; 114.3 ‘1999 in retrospect’ 81.2-3 toaster, glass 90.9 ‘Taste’ paintings 81.10; 128.16 Thomas Webb & Co./Sons 4.2; 26A.4; 39.5; 50.5; toasting fork SR 29 Tatton Park 59.6; 86.1 103.11, 12, 19; 106.12; CS 16, 17; JL 10.50-1, toasting-glasses 124.15; 133.18; Col. 11, 27, 28, 29, tavern tokens 127.20-2 63; PP 7, 56, 58, 59, 62, 66, 83, 86, 87, 88, 89, 34, 38, 59, 61, 62; DJ 46; JL 9.13; SR 25 taxation on glass 91, 92, 93, 94, 96 smashing 57.8-9; JL 9.13 1695-1699 96.8; 119.12-15; 120.10-12; ‘Art, Feat and Mystery’: The story of Thomas Webb toastmasters’ glasses 111.18; 131.6; 121.10-12; 122.12-13 & Sons 10.4; 30.7; 60.3 DJ 42, 44, 45; SR 22 1745 Excise Duty 87.7; 92.2; 136.10 closure 49.6 toasts Act 1745 98.3, 4 Coloroll takeover 39.5; 44.2; 48.2 Dutch 125.3 1745-1854 70.12-13; 87.7, 8; 134.27 scent bottle PP 86 Irish 101.6, 7 and Ireland 134.27 vases PP 25; 123.12-13 Jacobite 53.8; 56.2; 66.11; JL 9.13, 18 abolition 27.3; PP 6 Thomas Webb Museum 39.5 Kit Kat Club 75.10; 124.17-18; JL 9.9-10 and America 138.16 Thompson, Jenny Orange Order 120.13, 14 20c. 136.10 collection 73.14 to women 124.17-18; JL 9.10 Taylor, Geoff 103.10, 11 The Identification of English Pressed Glass 45.4-5; Tobin, Susan Taylor, John (chinaman) JL 11.45, 63 57.6 Glass 100.14 Taylor, John, ‘the water poet’ 102.6-7 ‘Press-moulded glass’ CS 14-15 toddy 140.20, 23 Taylor, Mark 135.6-8 Thornton, Dora toddy-lifter PP 13; 103.14 Taylor, Richard A Rothschild Renaissance: Treasures from the toilet water bottles JL 11.88, 90 ‘Glass through the post’ 129.16-18 Waddesdon Bequest 140.28 Toledo, Ohio 112.10 tazzas 104.10, 11, 14; 107.18; 110.17; 128.30; Thorpe, William A. Col. 5, 26, 31; DJ 13; Glass Museum 112.8, 10, 12-13; 113.5, 7; 129.27; 129.5; 133.19; DJ 50; PP 80; SR 10, 11 JL 5.62, 75, 79 130.14; 136.22; 138.23-4 Morrison Tazza 31.5; 37.8 ‘Antecedents of the Circle’ JL 1.4-6 ancient glass 46.5 Richardson’s PP 22 English Glass 64.7; 96.7; 116.3, 5 Pavillion 138.23, 24 tea bowl and saucer PP 86, 87 A History of English and Irish Glass 92.2; Tomabechi, K. INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 45 Uranium Glass 69.4 Traquair House 52.10; 98.9; 100.5-7; 105.9; 109.4; Slim Jims 80.4 Toninato, Tullio and Cesare Moretti. JL 10.14-33 Tudor Crystal 97.11 Glass recipes of the Renaissance 97.10 Trench, Lucie: Materials and Techniques in the uranium 99.5-6 Torre Abbey 85.5 Decorative Arts 85.7 Tunsgate, Guildford 75.9; 90.9 Tosichi 79.8 Trerice 65.12 Tunstill Glass Collection 6.2; 7.5; 70.5; 73.2; 76.2 Toso, Gianfranco trick goblets DJ 50; SR 29 Turkey 113.12, 13 Murano. A History of Glass 97.9-10 Triestman Collection 108.16 Istanbul 107.13; 110.3 toughened glass 109.14 Trinity House 93.6 Turnbull, Jill 99.4 tourism 101.4 Troost, Cornelis: NELRI pastels JL 9.14, 20 ‘Jacobite / Jacobean’ and other reproduction Tower Bridge SR 48 trophies 89.9 glasses produced by the Edinburgh and Leith Townshend, Athelny: ‘Conjectures on a Dutch Trotter, Thomas 102.7 Flint Glass Company’ 11.7-36 engraved goblet’ 137.18-21 Trubridge, Philip C. ‘A medley of material about Newcastle ‘Glassworkers lives’ 121.5 ‘Ale and beer glasses’ 3.2 glasshouses’ 95.7-8 (with S. Wain-Hobson) ‘But one twist’ 132.16-19 ‘Ale/beer glasses in the 19th century’ JL 3.87-96 ‘Another Scottish inventory’ 96.6 ‘A critique of E. Barrington Haynes’ ‘series’ ‘The English ale glasses 1685-1830’ ‘The production of table glass in Scotland’ 87.3 terms’ 133.22-5 JL 1.46-57; 2.26-36 The Scottish Glass Industry, 1610-1750 89.14; Towse, Anne 85.5; 131.6 True Blue Hunts 65.12-13; 68.12 125.20 Towse, John 32.3; 58.2 Trueman, Charles 73.15; 100.17; Col. 35, 37 ‘Some letters from William Haden Richardson’ collection 72.1; 73.8; 74.1, 2; 129.5 ‘French glass’ 13.4 10.34-43 ‘A collector on collectors and collecting’ 53.2 trumpet glass 137.5; 138.3; SR 28, 29 Turnbull, O. G. N., collection 12.3; 44.1; 52.10; 62.4 obituary 105.4 Tudor Crystal 97.11; 101.3; 103.10-12; 122.20; Turner, Ian, collection 96.14 tribute 131.6 CS 16, 18 Turner, W. E. 20.4 Toynbee-Clarke, Jill tumblers 69.7; 109.14-15; 110.3; 111.11; 116.13; collection 60.3 ‘18th century drinking habits’ 53.3; Ex. 9 DJ 49 Turner Museum, Sheffield 72.13, 14 trade Baccarat SR 59 twist stems 108.17; 123.10-11; 125.13; 131.17; antiques 131.7-11; 132 and beakers 38.8; 107.14; 115.14 132.6; DJ 44-5 among companies JL 10.37 blown 138.18 colour DJ 26, 27 European 92.2 and carafes JL 5.94 reproduction 81.4/9 London/France 74.5 Daum 126.5 rope twist 125.13 international 92.2-3 Delomosne 115.14-15; 132.7 see also air-twist stems; opaque twist stems Scottish 87.3 engraved 80.4 Tyson, Rachel Stourbridge 7.1-2 Four Continents 128.5 ‘Medieval glass vessels found in England’ 79.2 trade cards 75.5, 6; 76.5, 7; 91.10; 92.11; 100.10 Glass Tumblers 115.14 Medieval glass vessels found in England 86.10-11 18c. 95.4-5; JL 9.12 heat-sensitive PP 82 Tyzack, Don 105.2 chemist’s JL 1.43 Kentucky Derby souvenirs 113.1 Glass, Tools and Tyzacks 66.7; 75.4; 107.15 glass cutters’ 75.5-6; 76.5/7 Kothgasser SR 58 ‘Tyzacks of Lorraine’ 107.15 trade catalogue 113.16 Lynn 101.13; DJ 58 Tyzack, Paul 86.6-7 Trade Directories 75.3; 93.2-3 press-moulded 138.19 Tyzack family 4.6, 14; 5.75, 77-8; 107.15 trade marks 84.3; 85.13-14; 103.11 sales, 1675-1820 107.14 Trafalgar glasses 105.1, 11 1700-1900 38.8 transport engravings SR 45-7 1750-1830 115.14-15 Traquair family 9.65-6; JL 5.5, 9 1799 80.1 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 46 moss agate PP 81 opalescent PP 25 U V opaline PP 23 ostrich PP 77 Udall, Tim DJ 18 Val St Lambert 38.2; 109.17; 111.12; 125.19 palm tree PP 70-1 ‘45 years of collecting’ 128.22-3 Valentine-Richards, A. V. Col. 51-2 Patent Ivory PP 84, 85 ‘Glasses for the Dessert’ JL 5.33-56 Van den Bossche, Willy Savoy 73.1 Glasses for the Dessert 128.16, 17, 18 Antique Glass Bottles 87.9; 126.25 Venetian 73.1, 2-3; 102.1 ‘Jelly and syllabub glasses’ 15.4-5 Bibliography of Glass: From the Earliest Times to Thomas Webb PP 25; 123.12-13 ‘Posset glasses and pots’ 67.1-2 the Present 130.26; 131.4-5 see also cameo vases; Copeland Vase; retirement 55.3-4; 59.6; 62.1;125.22 van Dobben family 139.5-7 Portland Vase ‘17th and 18th century glasses for wet van Gin, Simon 130.23 Vaughan, Michael Thomas sweetmeats’ 112.5-6 van Heemskerk, Willem JL 68.3; 92.13 The City Glass Works and Pottery: Glasgow 31.6; ‘17th and 18th century sweetmeats’ 112.5-6 van Rossum, Hans 38.8 Ulster Museum 50.6; JL 9.69-70 ‘From BC to modern times’ 133.7-11 ‘Jacobite glass’ 47.4 Unguentariums SR 4, 5 van Schurman, Abraham Frederik ‘Medina glass history’ 101.4-5 Union Flint Glassworks, Bow 32.5 Varga, Vera: ‘Glass between East and West’ 119.4-5; ‘Monart and Vasart’ 37.3 Union glasses 69.9; 71.9; 101.6 120.15-17; 121.15-17 ‘The origins of Hebrew glass’ 49.5 United States Glass Company JL 5.57 Varnish & Co., E. PP 72; 115.1; 134.12-15 Scottish Art Glass 50.8 Universal British Directory 1793-1798 103.14 vaseline glass 97.9 Vaughan family 86.3; 118.7-8 Unsworth, John 111.11; 115.15; 4.5-6, 13, 14, 64 vases 72.1; 94.4; 62, 72, 74, 81; 26 JL PP SR Vauxhall glass-houses 35.6-7; 49.1-2 uranium 47.3; Col. 18; 86.2; 125.15, 16 amphorae PP 55, 88, 96; 133.6 Baker’s 106.10-11; 114.4; 120.13; 132.24 uranium glass 4.1-2; 47.3; 59.2; 64.7; 65.5; 69.3-4; banjo 99.13 Buckingham’s 35.6; 49.1; 62.2; 99.13; 106.10-11; 70.8; 78.7; 79, 81; ; Barbe 24-5 PP 99.5-8 125.15-16; PP 129.14; 130.18; 131.31; 132.24; 134.16 139.4; bottle 133.6 Veeckman, Johan: Majolica and glass from Italy to JL 10.39; 11.91-102 ‘brain’ PP 87 Antwerp and beyond 93.13 The Big Book of Vaseline Glass 97.9 bud DJ 51 Venice 74.3; 95.2 fluorescence 11.95-6 bulb-vases 129.24-5, 27-8 GC visit 95.13; 97.1, 3-4 radioactvity celery 114.15 11.99-101 Ruskin on 77.1; 78.2-3 x-ray radiation 11.96-9 chalice 110.5 17c. 17.3-4 see also Burmese glass Chinese SR 61, 62 see also Murano urns, glass 76.3; PP 29; SR 6 Collins, cut glass PP 14 Venetian glass 34.7; 63.3-4; 75.7; 98.1, 14; Ushabi SR 4 cranberry PP 80, 82, 83 104.13-14; 129.14; 130.17, 18-19; 131.4, 31; Usher Gallery 94.4 fan-shaped PP 82 132.3; Col. 5, 17, 31, 34, 62; SR x-xi Utrecht 138.26 Fonthill 137.26 beads 132.10, 11, 12 UV lamps 65.12; 66.3; 70.8; 98.7; 106.5 hyacinth PP 76 Beyond Venice 100.12; 104.9-10 intaglio 139.21 books on 49.5 Japanese 62 SR British Museum exh. 12.1 Lobmeyr 107.17 coralline PP 85, 86 Locke’s JL 5.55 in Corning Museum 104.8, 9-10 Lord Eldon 134.12-15 glassmaking 126.18-21 Medina 101.4 glossary 97.10 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 47 goblets 78.1; 80.8; 98.1; 128.3 Jubilee 2.1-2; PP 41, 42 126.23-4 lattimo plates 77.1; 78.4 portraits 90.4; 138.17 von Strasser, Rudolf paperweights 59.2 Victoria and Albert Museum, London 19.4; 52.6; Die Einschreibebuchlein des Wiener Glas 7.5 ‘The perilous path of collecting Venetian glass’ 55.6, 9; 58.3; 74.4, 11; 75.5-6; 100.15; 106.8-9; (with W. Spiegl) Dekoriertes Glas 49.5 68.2-3 108.2; 115.7; 118.3; Col. 9-15; DJ 14 Voneche glassworks 73.8; 100.15 recycled 92.1 bottles stolen 35.8 Vowles, Thomas SR 29 Renaissance 133.31 new Glass Gallery 59.9; Ex. 17 17c. 33.1-2 ‘The regeneration of a Gallery’ 61.6-7 style 115.3-5 stained glass windows 137.10-13 vases 73.1, 2-3; 102.1 Victoria Suite SR 2, 3 ‘Venetian and façon de Venise enamelled, gilded Victorian glass 28.5; 96.13; 131.12-15 W and millefiori glass’ 140.8-14 Decorative Victorian Glass 19.5; 22.4 Waddesdon 15.5; 54.11 at Waddesdon 15.5 pressed 83.11 wafers 101.14-15 see also façon de Venise for the rich 46.3 Wagenfeld, Wilhelm JL 7.58 Vere, Charles JL 1.11, 14, 17 Victorian Table Glass and Ornaments 9.2 wages 101.8-9 Vernoit, Stephen wine service 80.4 Wain-Hobson, Simon 135.6-8 ‘The discovery of Islamic enamelled glass’ 64.4 Vienna 34.8; 47.2; 127.23-4, 25-6; 133.26-7; (with A. Townshend) Verre Ex. 16 JL 7.57 ‘But one twist’ 132.16-19 Verre & Histoire 124.9 Secession 127.23; 128.11-15 ‘A critique of E. Barrington Haynes’ Verre églomisé 106.6; 112.6; 126.14-17; 130.27, 28; Viennese glass 133.12-15 ‘series’ terms’ 133.22-5 JL 4.51 vinaigrettes 104.17; 110.13 Wakefield, Hugh see also gold sandwich glass; reverse painting on Vincks, Sarah 133.20-1 death 28.4 glass Vintners Company Col. 3, 34; 102.6 25.2 Versailles 45.8; 105.9; 116.13 Vintners Hall 77.3 Nineteenth Century British Glass ‘Victorian dealers and their innovations’ 28.5 Verzelini, Jacob Col. 19 collection 74.8 waldglas SR x Verzelini glass 8.2; 13.1; 24.1; 25.1; 26A.1 Vispré brothers SR 64 Wale, Edward JL 11.50-1, 76 vessel glass 114.7 Vivian, Graham 86.5; 101.15-16; 140.24-5 Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool 63.8 Veste Coburg 3.5; 68.1-2; 69.8 ‘Collecting antique glass’ 95.4 walking sticks 114.16; PP 97, 99; 102.18 vetro a reticello 68.1 Volunteer glasses 64.6, 69; 69.10; 99.7; Wallace, Sir Richard 26A.4; 97.4; vetro a retortoli SR 8, 9, 10, 11 JL 9.62-3, 67, 70-2, 75; SR 34 JL 10.44-63, 66; PP 48 dating 133.16-21 von Kerssenbrock-Krosigk, Dedo Wallace Collection 97.2-3; 99.4; making 134.18-23 ‘Looking at glass’ 128.24-6 JL 10.45, 52-3 Vetro magazine 97.10 von Lichtenberg, Paul Walpole, Horace 67.12; 77.1; JL 7.33-4 vials JL 1.12 ‘The Biedermeier glass engraver Domink Walpole, Sir Robert 110.10; 117.4-5; 124.17; Vickers, Percival JL 4.67, 68, 83 Biemann’ JL 10.76-89 JL 9.15 Victoria, Queen 56.2, 4; 80.4; 86.4; 88.2; 112.13; ‘Collecting Continental glass’ 136.6-8 Walpole Society 81.10, 11; 97.6; 98.4, 9 135.9; 138.8, 19; PP 13, 36, 37, 65; ‘Dominik Bieman Glass Engraver’ 102.5-6 Walsh, John Walsh 45.1-2; 80.11; 84.4-5; JL 10.37; JL 2.21; 4.81; 7.18-19, 28, 29 Glasgravuren des Beidermeier 102.5, 6; 103.8, 9; PP 30, 67, 70-1, 73, 77, 78, 88; 98.9 arms PP 12, 13 104.13 Walter, Amalric 125.14-16 banquet JL 9.23 ‘Hieronymus Hackel (1785-1844)’ 139.8-11 Walton, Karin M. death PP 40, 42, 43 ‘Pointillism in glass painting’ 126.6-10 ‘Bristol Museums and Art Gallery’ Col. 33-40 glass busts PP 40, 41 Transparent Bemaltes Biedermeierglas 122.22; INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 48 Walton, Thomas 134.33-4 ‘Cut glass and its development in the 18th ‘The magic of decorative glass panels’ 66.1-3 Warmus, Bill: Emile Gallé 29.2 century’ 100.8-9 ‘The mystery of the claw beaker’ 116.3-5 Warren, Phelps: ‘Later Chinese glass’ 7.3 ‘Design Registration & Trade Marks’ 84.3; ‘The mystery of the double pontil mark’ 110.4-5 Warrington, JL 7.5-6 85.13-14 obituary 140.1, 29-31 Warrington Glass 59.6; 79.4, 40; 83.5; 86.3; Editorials 102 to 120 ‘Origin of the yard-of-ale glasses?’ 73.5 JL 7.11 retires as editor 122.3 presentation to 102.3 service JL 9.23 ‘The emergence and adoption of style ...’ 115.2-6 ‘Problems with the colour and constitution of Warrington Hunt 115.14, 15 ‘Encounters with R. J. Charleston’ 61.4-5 some 18th century glasses’ 21.1-2 Warrington Museum 115.14, 15; JL 9.16 JL 8.14-15 ‘The production of Glass Circle News’ CS 3 wash-hand-cups 115.14 ‘Flint glass’ 130.17-19 ‘A provenance problem with Union glasses’ 71.9 washing sets 64.7; 66.10 ‘Fly-drive to glass in NorthAmerica’ 77.8-9 ‘Shades of red’ JL 9.41-58 wasp traps 84.6; SR 66 ‘The forgotten Great Fire of London’ 108.2-7 ‘Shades of red: gold ruby glass’ 91.9 watch covers 43.1, 2; 82.13 ‘Found wanting ... Sebastien Zoude glass ‘Shades of red: the problems of ruby glass’ 75.8-9 water bottles 22.1; PP 60, 61; see also carafes catalogue’ 113.3-6 ‘Silver-mounted claret jugs in the Kent collection’ water bowls 85.9; see also finger bowls ‘Gadget and Shear Marks’ 103.10-12; 104.11 91.6-7 water glasses 85.9; 115.14 ‘Gerald Hugh Tait FS.A.’ 103.3-4 ‘Skulduggery at the glasshouse’ 132.24 see also finger bowls; tumblers ‘Getting to know American glass’ 138.16-19, ‘Tricks of the trade’ 126.18-21 water jugs PP 18, 20, 21, 27, 75: see also carafes 139.16-18; 140.30 ‘A Trip to Toledo’ 112.10-11 Waterford 8.1; 20.1; 82.6 ‘Glass in the sub-real world’ 77.6 ‘Unhappy glassmakers’ 89.2 Waterford glass 85.9; 126.25; 130.11-13; 131.23; Glass Recipes of the Renaissance 128.29-30 ‘Union, anti-Union or Jacobite?’ 69.9 132.4-5; DJ 30, 34 ‘Glass trip to Philadelphia’ 120.13-15 ‘The use of uranium to colour glass’ 4.1-2 Cinderella’s coach 89.9 ‘The great Aldrevandinus Beaker mystery’ ‘What future for the British domestic glass Waterford Museum 127.3 107.1-9 industry?’ 86.14 Watford Building Research Station 77.6; 78.6 ‘Here’s to a tot of gin!’ 117.3-7 ‘What is glass’ SR ix-xii Watford Crystal 129.30; 130.5; 131.21-3 A History of Glassmaking in London 120.5; 122.3; ‘Who made the Newcastle glasses?’ 92.1-7 Watford Glass Company 129.30; 131.21-3 137.24-5; 140.31 ‘Working with Wafers’ 101.14-15 Watson, Gordon, collection 108.18 ‘A history of glassmaking on the Thames South Watts, Rosemary 94.4; 140.29 Watson, Oliver Bank’ 62.2-3 Waugh, Anthony, collection 15.6 ‘The regeneration of a Gallery’ 61.6-7 ‘How did George Ravenscroft discover lead Wear Flint Glass House 110.10 Watts, David C. 87.5; 99.5; 140.7; CS 2 crystal?’ JL 2.71-84 Webb, Frank Piggott 22.1, 3-4 ‘The action taken by Sir Robert Mansell to ‘How George Ravenscroft really did discover Webb, John JL 11.53, 63 preserve his patent monopoly’ JL 10.6-12 English lead crystal glass’ 114.1, 2-4 Webb, Joseph PP 68 ‘Ameklung, Lowenstein and statistics!’ 76.6-7 comments on 116.8-9 Webb, Thomas 88.1, 9 ‘Another look at the lemon-squeezer foot’ ‘The Ide family glassworks at Glass House Fields JL 4.20, 21-6, 28, 30-3, 36-43, 65, 67, 70; 123.14-15 109.5-8 11.103, 106 ‘Apsley Pellatt on England’s black and murky ‘From T & W Ide to Rankin Glass’ 111.5 commemorative glasses JL 7.19 land’ 111.15-16 ‘T & W Ide: The 20th century’ 110.10-11 see also Thomas Webb & Co. ‘The Causes and Battle against the Duty on Glass, ‘Lessons from the trip to Cologne’ 104.13-14 Webb Corbett 8.6; 73.9; CS 16, 17 1695-1699’ 119.12-15; 120.10-12; 121.0-12; ‘Lime and lead’ CS 8-9/11 Webster, Jane 28.1; 49.4; 137.27 122.12-13 ‘A look at Irish glass’ 91.11-12 Wecker, Johann Jacob JL 1.24 ‘A Church with a sad history’ 102.8 ‘Looking at uranium glass’ 69.3-4 Weddell, Paul ‘Crystal and coloured from sand and ashes’ 55.9 ‘Made to Measure’ 102.12-13 ‘Glass and the First World War’ 136.18-21 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 49 ‘Glass, brass and silver’ 132.20-2 JL 4.4, 20; 7.15; 9.7, 10, 62-3; 10.48, 77; 124.20 ‘The last draw’ 134.24-9 11.75, 103-12 Medieval Glass for Popes, Princes and Peasants wedding cups SR 25 Bohemian 125.21 124.20 Wedgwood, Josiah 68.4; 100.14; 106.3; 16-17c. JL 6.8-19 (with S. Carboni) Glass of the Sultans 87.10 JL 11.104, 106, 108 whimsies / friggers 10.4; 43.1-2; 80.6; 137.6-9; Whitley, Roger 127.20-1 Weeden, Cyril Ex. 18 Whittington Court 42.1-2; 59.2, 4; 69.6; 81.9; Ex. 13 death 56.7 Whin Club, Edinburgh 114.11 Whittington Loving Cup JL 6.68-72; 7.19 ‘Doctor Syntax in the glasshouse’ 38.1 whisky 125.11 Whitworth, H. PP 62 JL 7.4-14 measures 89.9 Wig Club 83.9, 10 ‘Friggers, whigmalleries and witchballs’ 43.1-2 Whistler, Laurence 8.2; 28.1; 32.3; 54.4-5; Col. 19; Wight, Karol B.: ‘Mould-blown glass from ancient ‘The Ricketts family and the Phoenix glasshouse’ 104.5, 6, 18; 108.12; 110.10; SG 38 Rome’ 138.11-15 16.2 death 86.5 Wilcock, Ruth 102.5-6 ‘The Ricketts family and the Phoenix glasshouse, Pictures on Glass DJ 12 Wildblood, Hugo Bristol’ JL 4.84-101 Whistler, Simon L. 49.4; 103.2, 5-6, 8; 108.1 ‘Pall Mall pattern glassware’ 120.16 weights and measures ‘The light made articulate’ 54.4-5 Wilkes, Robert in Scotland 102.11-12 On a Glass Lightly 100.20 ‘Chance Brothers 1950/1’ 109.10-11 see also measurement; measures White, Rebecca and Mary C. Mills ‘Notes on the Importance of Cullet’ 113.10-11; Weiner, G.G. ‘Rediscovering American glassworkers 114.6-7; 116.11-12; 118.12 Unique Lalique Mascots 136.23 whimsies’ 137.6-9 Wilkin, Neil 49.4 Weissglas, Bohemian JL 6.8 white glass JL 10.38-9 William III, King (Prince Willem III) 4.2; 75.9; 83.10; Well Spring glasses SR 39 Roman JL 1.12 86.3; 96.8; 114.17; 117.2, 5; 111.18 Welwyn Garden City 2.4 Weissglas, Bohemian JL 6.8 portraits 81.11; 94.12; 106.16 Werner, Alex see also ; opaque white glass William IV, Prince of Orange 106.16 ‘Dickens and glass’ 131.26 White Glass House 62.3 William V, Prince of Orange ‘Thomas Betts – cutter and glass seller’ 31.4 White House Cone Museum 139.2, 20-1 goblet 127.9, 28; 136.22 ‘The Wyllie family of London glass cutters and White Lion engraving 129.29; 130.4 Williamite glasses 11.3; 44.5; 50.1; 63.10; 64.6; retailers’ 51.6 Whitefriars 17.1; 40.1-2; 65.1-3; 66.7; 66.Sup; 67.10; 69.10; 85.6; 94.12; 95.6; 100.18; 114.17; Werner, Alfred E. A. 110.2 68.5/13; 69.12; 73.1, 10, 11; 98.10-11, 14; 116.17; 120.13; Ex. 21; SR 50; West, Mark JL 105.17; 109.17 99.9; 104.15; 114.16; 123.4-6; 131.27; JL 7.40-9; 9.69-70, 71-3 West Lothian Glass Works JL 2.17-25 135.16; Col. 43; JL 11.103, 106, 108, 112 inscriptions 63.2 West Surrey College 49.2-3 in Cecil Higgins 49.6 Orange Order toast 120.13, 14 Weston, Matthew 129.19-20 glassworks close 15.2; 19.2 toasts JL 7.41-2 Westwood, Edward JL 6.47-48, 51 price-list 111.10-11 Williams, John JL 4.7, 15; 5.76-7; 7.15 Whaling Museum, New Bedford, USA CS 2 stained glass cartoons 137.27 Williams, Nigel 42.6 Whall, Christopher 82.6; 129.24 symposium 68.8; Ex. 14 death 54.12 Whatmoor, Philip 28.2; DJ 18; SR viii Whitefriars Glass 67.5 The Breaking and Remaking of the Portland Vase ‘A Christmas interlude with the musical window showing glass-making 82.11 44.5 glasses’ 37.2-3 Whitehaven Glassworks 66.10 Williams Wynn, Sir Watkin 87.9; 100.1, 18; 111.6-8; death 44.10; Ex. 7 Whitehaven Goblet 135.22, 23; JL 9.28-9, 33-4 118.7, 8; JL 9.15-16, 65 obituary JL 6.72 Whithorn 76.4 crest 86.3 wheel-engraving 108.12; 125.21; 128.8; 108.12; Whitehouse, David 54.1; 132.30 Williamson, Alexander Hardie 69.7 128.8; 130.24; 131.27; Col. 1, 3, 6, 102.5; Islamic Glass in the Corning Museum 123.20; Williams-Thomas, R.S. INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 50 death 48.7; 49.8 wine glasses 80.4; 85.9; 98.3-4; JL 11.80, 81 Woodman, Rachel 38.4; 45.3; 47.4; 49.4 ‘Six generations reflected in glass’ 27.3-4 colour 135.11 Woodward, Herbert W. 15.1; 10.2 Wills, Geoffrey 14.2 dedicated to women 124.17-18 ‘Art, Feat and Mystery’: The story of Thomas Webb Wilmott, Hugh 18c. 84.9; 97.12; 101.1; 104.6-7; 109.12; 124.23; & Sons 10.4; 30.7; 60.3 Early post-medieval vessel glass in England 94.10 137.18-21 ‘British glass in 19th century exhibitions’ 30.3-4 ‘Recent research on the Gracechurch Street favourites 124.4; 125.13; 127.5; 137.5 death 80.3 Hoard 83.6-7 polygonal 73.8, 9; 74.4 Schott Guide to Glass (revision of Pfander’s) 30.7 Wilshere collection 116.13 rinsers 59.6; 122.17 The Story of Edinburgh Crystal 30.7-8; 103.10 Wilson, George Col. 17-19 seven deadly sins design 123.8-9 Woolley & Wallis 104.16, 17; 106.16; 108.17 Wilson, H. Weber shapes 84.9 Woolston, Derek 83.7; 113.7; DJ 18 Great Glass in American Architecture 50.8 sizes 122.10-11; 123.21 Woolwich 62.2-3; 76.7; 106.11 Wilson, Kenneth M. 103.2, 7, 8 A Wine Lover’s Glasses 86.9/13 Worcester Porcelain Works JL 10.56 The American Glass 1760-1930 103.7, 11; 112.12 with ‘ale’ engraving 124.8 working-class glass 123.2 Mt. Washington & Pairpoint Glass 103.7; Wine Label Circle 124.9 World Art Glass Quarterly 110.14-15 106.11-12; 129.26 wine service, Victorian 80.4 World of Brewing Museum, London 15.1, 2; 17.1 Wiltshire Municipal Museum 12.3 Winter, Friedrich 136.12-14; JL 6.12, 18 World Fairs 35.9 Winchester 140.8-9 Winterthur Museum 77.10 World of Glass Museum, St Helens 83.11; 84.3; 89.9; Winchester bottles JL 1.38 wire glass JL 5.57 Ex. 16 Winchester House glass-house 49.2; 62.2; 129.12; Wistar, Caspar 138.16 World War I 110.10; 124.12; 136.18-21 130.20 witch balls 43.1, 2; SR 32 World War II 110.11; 124.12 Windmill, James R. 35.1-2; JL 6.46 witch bottles 43.1 Worshipful Company of Glass Sellers see Windmill family JL 6.46-53 witch in a bottle 82.13 Glass Sellers Company windows 19.1; 40.6; DJ 19 Wittington Court 81.9 Worsley, Katharine 53.6; DJ 17; Ex. 11; SR xiii Cecil Higgins Gallery 73.7 Woburn 118.4-6; JL 11.37-8, 39, 40, 44, 64-5 wrythen stand 112.15; 114.15 for churches 109.11 Woking Glass Fair 109.17 wrythen stems 101.14; 123.10; 137.22; PP 74 double glazing 77.6; 88.2-3; 107.18 Wolff, David 4.3; 26A.4; 77.3; 92.3, 6; DJ 47 Wyllie family 51.6 18c. 104.6 Wolfenden, Ian JL 10.51 Wymeswold 98.10-11 pharmacy JL 1.34-6, 42 ‘British cut glass: the early 19th century’ 100.10 shops JL 1.34-5 ‘English rock crystal glass’ 3.2-3 16c. 110.9 ‘English rock crystal glass 1878-1925’ JL 4.20-45 see also under stained glass Wolff, David JL 8.80-4 wine 71.7; JL 2.4, 5, 8 Wolryche Fool 98.8; 101.10 drinking 104.7; 122.10-11 Wolverhampton Polytechnic 48.7 X xylophone, glass armonica tasting 71.7; 128.2; 129.3 women 124.17-18 see wine and water glasses 84.9; 85.9 Wood, Pamela: ‘Glass in Nottinghamshire’ 129.22-3 wine bottles 71.7; 114.18; 121.18; PP 60, 61 Woodall, George 94.1; PP 9 Australian 115.15 Woodchester 116.11 black 122.10, 11 woodcuts 106.1-2, 13 dated 51.10 Woodford, Parson 86.4 Y 1660 65.7 Woodhead, E. I.: Lighting Devices 31.1 yard-of-ale glasses 73.5; Col. 9 wine coolers 121.18 Woods, May and Arete Warren Yates, Sarah: Collecting Glass 87.14 wine fountain 128.18 Glass Houses 94.10 INDEX OF GLASS CIRCLE PUBLICATIONS PAGE 51 Yespes, Tomas 133.19 Yokohama 92.14 York 47.5 Minster 35.4 Treasurer’s House 83.5 Yorkshire 18.2; 19.1; 55.5; 140.13 Young, Hilary: ‘Glass cutters’ trade cards’ 75.5-6 Ysartnews 46.2

Z Zach, Frans Paul 104.8, 12, 13 Zechin, Luigi 49.5 Zeuner, Jonas JL 4.52, 63 zinc 125.15, 16 zoomorphic glass see animals, glass Zouch, Sir Edward 129.13; JL 10.7 Zoude, Sebastian 92.3, 5; 93.2; 100.2; 101.2; 113.2, 3-5, 7; 125.18