Archive for August, 2009

The History of the Wine Glass – Part 3

 

Venetian Wine Glasses

 

The origins of the wine glass cannot be fully appreciated without a look at what began in Venice, Italy. Around 1000 AD, the Venetians brought back the knowledge of glass making from the Near East and by the thirteenth-century, Venice had become the center of the glass universe. On the nearby island of Murano, glassmakers were the most prominent citizens and it was here that the Venetian art form was perfected. By the late 1500’s, the fame of Venetian glass had spread throughout Europe and many Venetians established themselves in foreign countries utilizing the techniques their people had perfected.

 

The earliest surviving English wine glasses are diamond-engraved glasses produced near the late 1500’s by Jacopo Verzelini, a Venetian glass maker who was given a royal privilege for glass making in 1575. The façon de Venise (Venetian Fashion) was an extremely important selling line in European glasshouses. By the end of the seventeenth-century the prestige of Venetian glass had declined but not before an entire industry had been created. Every country had begun producing their own versions of glasses in the Venetian style.

 

Successful glassmakers required a lot of wood in order to heat up and melt their glass. As a result, many migrated to forested areas like that of northern Bohemia where Johann Christoph Riedel was born in 1678. This was a favorable area for glassmaking and where he learned the trade. The Riedel name is now synonymous with fine glassware. The company has been a family run business through 11 generations.

 

Old Riedel Trademark

 

Plain straight stems gained popularity around 1740, with air twist stems being introduced about the same time. Ten years later, a twist incised on the exterior of the stem became popular. Quality crystal wine glasses were being produced in France near the end of the eighteenth-century. Cordial glasses in the eighteenth-century had bowls of the same shapes that were typical for wine glasses, but they were much smaller, holding about one ounce. 

 

Toastmaster’s glasses were made with a thicker bottom and walls so that they would hold less. A toastmaster had to drain every glass and still be able to remain standing till all toasts were completed. Wine glasses during the nineteenth-century were often produced in sets – with a dozen each of port and sherry, burgundy and claret, champagne glasses and liqueur glasses.

 

The second half of the twentieth-century brought the advent of specifically shaped glasses for every variety of wine. In 1973, Riedel introduced their hand-made Sommelier series of ten different sizes of glasses which has since expanded into an all-embracing, state-of-the-art wine glass collection. The future of the wine glass looks clear – the nuances of the world’s wines can be appreciated and enjoyed like no other time in history.

 

Riedel Sommelier Glasses

The History of the Wine Glass – Part 2

 

 

Earthenware Piggin

 

If you couldn’t get your hands on glass, what did you use? Many alternatives have been used over the years ranging from the simply practical to the bizarre. Here are a few of the more unique drinking vessels from the last millennia presented here courtesy of the Gurdies Winery in Australia:

 

Piggin - from the middle ages, a small leather cup.        

 

Noggin – small wooden mug around 1/4 pint.

 

Goddard – pewter vessel used by the church.

 

Bombard – tall, holding several gallons, richly decorated.

  

Hanap – a tall, ornate largely ornamental vessel, eventually only used on special occasions and stored in a hanaps basket, hence a hamper.

 

Tappit-Hen or Stirrup Cup – A tankard with a cup shaped lid originating in Scotland, used to send off guests late at night with a final brew, the lid keeping the brew safe when the guests departed on horseback.

 

Fuddling cup – vessel with three or more small cups with interlinked handles and joined through a small hole in the walls, the idea was to drink from one cup without spilling the contents of the others.

 

Whistle cup – From the Middle ages, whoever could drink the most for the longest got to blow the whistle as the ‘last man standing’ to order more drink.

 

Puzzle jug – Jug with many holes around the neck which have to be closed with fingers and thumbs to make sure you can drink from the top.

 

Yard glass – traditionally a quart measure from the mid 1600’s with a bulb at one end which had to be drunk without taking it from ones lips.

 

Milk jugs – before coffee and tea, mixes of herbs and milk were drunk around the table from a communal jug shaped like a cow, the tail being the handle. This later became a communal wine glass passed around.

 

Cocoa Nut Goblet    Early Milk Jug    Ostrich Egg Goblet  

 

 

Cocoa nut and ostrich egg cups – both have been made into silver encrusted cups.

 

Gourd cup – originated in the early 1600’s fashioned in silver to look like a gourd with the stem being the tree trunk.

 

Toby jugs – can be sailors, priests, policemen or anyone from famous ceramic makers.

 

Wine tasters – a little silver flat bowl with two handles on each side flat with the top rim. From the Medieval days to taste the contents of bowls to convince guests that nothing was poisoned. The finest glass was made from the late 17th century to the early stages of the 18th century. The most popular form was a simple goblet with a glass stem.

 

Jacobite glass – became common from the 1700’s onwards with each Freemason lodge having it’s own glassware.

 

Dice glasses – have two dice sealed into the base, used in old taverns to settle who pays for the purchases.

 

Last drop glass – featured an engraved man hanging from the yardarm that is not visible till the last drop is drunk.

The History of the Wine Glass – Part 1


Roman-Briton Cylices

As long as there has been wine there has been a way to hold it. A wide variety of vessels have been used over the many centuries it took for the wine glass to evolve.


The history of wine glasses begins with the discovery and production of the world’s first glass materials. Types of glass, like Obsidian, occur naturally in nature and have been used as tools since the Stone Age. Glass production for things like jewelry started in the third millennium BC in Egypt. However, it was not until the reign of Thutmose III (1479-1425 BC) that we see the first evidence of glass hollowware. There are several formulas for making glass contained in the clay-tablet library of the Assyrian King Ashurbanipal (668-627 BC). Remarkably, the recipes recoded contain basically the same ingredients that glass is made from today, but in different ratios.


In his Naturalis Historia, Pliny the Elder (AD 23-79) describes the composition and manufacture of glass which during his time, were as expensive as precious metals in the Roman Empire. He believed that glass was the preferred vessel for drinking wine, however the time required to produce it made drinking wine from glasses too expensive and impractical.

In the meantime, on the heels of the bronze age, the Romans used goblets made of lead, silver, or pottery. The technology of drink-ware evolved immensely during this time and there were many alternative materials to glass that were used in different parts of the world.


The Roman-Britons of the 5th Century created a shallow cup on a tall stem called a Cylix. Other types of Cylices were more functional with thicker stems or wider bowls. Earthenware vessels were made for common use. Horn Flagons were used for communion by the church until AD 785 when they were forbidden. The church then moved to wooden chalices and then silver and gold over the next 400 years. Wood tankards were in common use in households and taverns by the end of the first millennium and were made of wood that was bound together with wattle or hide and came complete with a handle and a lid.

Wooden Tankard               Leather Blackjack

Leather vessels known as ‘Black Jacks’ became popular in the 14th Century. They consisted of pieces of leather sewn together to form the shape of a jug and handle. The first part of the name comes from the black pitch that was used on the inside of the jug to seal it. The latter part of the name derives from the leather used to make the vessel. The material was similar to the leather vests that archers used as light armor known as a ‘jack of defense’.


The wine glass was well on its way. As the methods for glass making improved, costs diminished and the glass became the vessel of choice. By the 1400’s, we see the first examples of wine glasses with a base, a stem, and a foot.