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Italian glassware has a glorious and interesting story. History describes that the process of making glass started in romantic Italy in the pre-Roman period when unnamed sailors made a large fire on the beach and made the discovery that the very hot sand transformed into glass.
As long ago as 450 AD, the making of glassware from Italy might have begun in Venice in Italy.
Apprenticeships in addition to standards of conduct for Italian glassmakers were initially in place during the reign of the famous Constantine.
The formulation of particular Italian glassware manufacturing methods, such as filigrana and enameling had also by that time taken place.
Dads conveyed to their sons the techniques and glass formulas by way of family cookbooks. For hundreds of years the recipes have been fine-tuned and several additions have been added.
Glassmaking Shifted to The Venecitian Island of Murano
Throughout Constantine’s rule Venice served as the main hub of Italian glassware manufacture and innovation. In the late 13th century, a law was made that prevented the formation of new glasshouses inside the city itself because of the scores of fires started by glasshouses.
The decree led to the glassware making to relocate to Murano, an island close to Venice, where glassmaking is still thriving to this day.
Different manufacturers began to enter the scene after the business had been dominated by Italian glassware making throughout the Renaissance as well as well into the seventeenth century.
The clarity, color, delicacy, and beauty of Italian glassware was as highly appreciated and celebrated during those times as it is today.
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