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・ Forest Friends
・ Forest frog (disambiguation)
・ Forest gardenia
・ Forest gardening
・ Forest Gate
・ Forest Gate Community School
・ Forest Gate railway station
・ Forest gecko
・ Forest genetic resources
・ Forest germander
・ Forest Geyer
・ Forest giant squirrel
・ Forest Glade
・ Forest Glade, Texas
・ Forest Glade, Windsor
Forest glass
・ Forest Glen
・ Forest Glen (Metra station)
・ Forest Glen Annex
・ Forest Glen Preserve
・ Forest Glen station
・ Forest Glen, California
・ Forest Glen, Chicago
・ Forest Glen, Maryland
・ Forest Glen, New South Wales
・ Forest Glen, Nova Scotia
・ Forest Glen, Queensland
・ Forest Green
・ Forest green
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Forest glass : ウィキペディア英語版
Forest glass

Forest glass (''Waldglas'' in German) is late Medieval glass produced in North-Western and Central Europe from about 1000-1700 AD using wood ash and sand as the main raw materials and made in factories known as glass-houses in forest areas.〔Tait, H., 1991.〕 It is characterized by a variety of greenish-yellow colors, the earlier products being often of crude design and poor quality, and was used mainly for everyday vessels and increasingly for ecclesiastical stained glass windows. Its composition and manufacture contrast sharply with Roman and pre-Roman glass making centered on the Mediterranean and contemporaneous Islamic glass making to the east.
==History==
While under Roman rule the raw materials and manufacturing methods of Northern Europe were those of the Roman tradition, using the mineral Natron. For several centuries after the fall of the Roman Empire around 450 AD, recycling of Roman glass formed the major part of the local industry and glass-making skills declined. With the rise of the Carolingian Empire in north-west Europe around 800 AD increasing demand for glass and problems with supply of traditional raw materials, together with an imperial desire to emulate the more sophisticated culture of the Islamic Empire (which was producing high quality glass) led to experimentation with new raw materials and the development of a totally new glass-making technology.〔〔Wedepohl 2000〕
Archaeologically, numerous medieval glass-houses have been found in western and central Europe, particularly in the mountains of Germany. Due to later reuse of the building material, most are poorly preserved, but there is evidence that both glass-making and working were often done on the same site.〔Seibel 2000〕

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