Richly decorated enamelled glass objects and fragments of different provenance and epoch have been analysed using mobile and fixed Raman instruments: some fragments of the outstanding Begram treasure (Musée des arts asiatiques -Guimet, Paris) dated to the 1 st century AD, mosque lamps and bottles of Syrian/Egyptian provenance dated to the 13 th /14 th century (collections of Musée du Louvre and of Musée des arts décoratifs, Paris). The techniques are compared using the data obtained from the study of a group of similar objects and fragments discovered in Melfi Castle in the South of Italy in an archaeological context dated to the last quarter of the 13 th century. The glass body was difficult to analyse requiring the use of high-energy high-power laser beams and/or sampling that allowed determining the soda-lime type precisely. In contrast, a variety of colouring agents was identified: lapis lazuli and/or cobalt for blue, antimonate pyrochlore solid solution for yellow, with the addition of cobalt/lapis lazuli for green, hematite for red and calcium phosphate/cassiterite/calcium antimonate for white. Where present, gilding was found applied on a rough and matt red enamel base probably in order to guarantee the physical adherence of the gold leaves. The comparison between the above mentioned groups of objects and between them and data existing in the literature about Roman enamelled glass allowed us to follow the evolution of the technology of this class of precious artefacts and to discuss the potential of the mobile Raman analysis.
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