Conical Lamp

Art Institute of Chicago

Conical Lamp

Roman; Eastern Mediterranean

Date
275–300
Medium
Glass
Culture
Mediterranean Region
Department
Arts of Greece, Rome, and Byzantium
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

This lamp was meant to be suspended from polykandela, or chandeliers, which hung from the ceiling. The early Byzantines, like the Romans before them, typically burned olive oil for light. Lamps made from glass such as this were more expensive than the numerous surviving terracotta examples, and they were likely used to light the most important part of a church, such as, the altar or the nave. Keeping the lamps lit was costly, and generous donors gave endowments to churches to literally keep the lights on. Emperor Constantine, for example, donated the revenue from seven large estates specifically for the maintenance of 174 lamps, polykandela, and candlesticks in the Basilica of Saint John Lateran in Rome.

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Object type
AAT300193015

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