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History of Glass

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harrym | 11:55 Sun 31st Aug 2003 | History
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Does anyone know when glass was first used in house building, or anything else for that matter?
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Here's a bit of info I gleaned from a web site.
Around the first century A.D., the Romans used casts to make the first translucent windowpanes. By the fourth century, they learned to slit open glass cylinders and heat them until they lay flat. In medieval times, the Normans created blown-glass panes by spinning hot glass into a large flat disk. Windows grew gradually cheaper due to mechanization and better glass formulas. In 1902, American inventor John Lubbers developed an automatic system for drawing a 50-foot cylinder of hot glass using a jet of compressed air. About the same time, Emile Fourcault in Belgium and Irving Colburn in the United States separately created plate glass by drawing hot gobs of it through rollers. This method banished the rippled surface seen in old windows. In 1959 Alastair Pilkington in England floated molten glass atop a smooth pool of melted tin, eliminating the need for grinding and polishing. French scientist Edouard Benedictus invented a safety glass, consisting of two panes held together by a flexible film of cellulose nitrate, in 1910. This year the Pilkington Company in England created glass coated to repel dirt' the first self-cleaning windows.
I thought it was discovered (though maybe not perfected) by the Ancient Egyptians, who noticed that when lightning struck sand, glass was formed. The Romans had it, that's for sure. Then the "recipe" for making glass was "forgotten" in Europe in the Middle Ages (except maybe by the monks). Medieval castles sure didn't have glass windowpanes.
Why did you post this in Music??!

[Now moved to History & Myths. - AB Editor]

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