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- Forest_glass abstract "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. 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.".
- Forest_glass thumbnail Roemer_Waldglas.jpg?width=300.
- Forest_glass wikiPageID "15915404".
- Forest_glass wikiPageLength "21180".
- Forest_glass wikiPageOutDegree "71".
- Forest_glass wikiPageRevisionID "703769598".
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Alkali.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Aluminium_oxide.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Annealing_(glass).
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Antimony.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Beech.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Bohemia.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Calcareous.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Calcium_oxide.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Caliphate.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Carolingian_Empire.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_glass.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Cobalt.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Copper.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Copper_oxide.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Coppicing.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Crucible.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Egypt.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Eichsfeld.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Engraving.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Flux_(metallurgy).
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Frit.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Georgius_Agricola.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Glass.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Glass_databases.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Glass_recycling.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Glassblowing.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Iron.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Iron_oxide.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Kleinlützel.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Lead.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Limestone.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Magnesium_oxide.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Manganese.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Natron.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Opacifier.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Pollarding.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Potash.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Provenance.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Quartz.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Redox.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Refractory.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Empire.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Roman_glass.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Silicon_dioxide.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Sodium.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Sodium_carbonate.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Spoil_tip.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Stained_glass.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Syria.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink The_Mandeville_Miniature.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Theophilus_Presbyter.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Tin.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Trace_element.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Venetian_glass.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Wadi_El_Natrun.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink Western_Roman_Empire.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink York_Minster.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink File:Agricola-3.png.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink File:Kalk-Natron-Glas_2D.png.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink File:Plate_27_10_24.jpeg.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink File:Plate_27_10_26.jpeg.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink File:Roemer_Waldglas.jpg.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLink File:St_Denis_North_a.jpg.
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLinkText "Forest glass".
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLinkText "forest glass".
- Forest_glass wikiPageWikiLinkText "glassmaking".
- Forest_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Forest_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Forest_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Disambiguation_needed.
- Forest_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Glass_forming.
- Forest_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Glass_science.
- Forest_glass wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Forest_glass subject Category:History_of_glass.
- Forest_glass hypernym Glass.
- Forest_glass type Work.
- Forest_glass type Redirect.
- Forest_glass type Thing.
- Forest_glass comment "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. 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.".
- Forest_glass label "Forest glass".
- Forest_glass sameAs Q1759306.
- Forest_glass sameAs Vidre_del_bosc.
- Forest_glass sameAs Waldglas.
- Forest_glass sameAs Vidrio_del_bosque.
- Forest_glass sameAs Bosglas.
- Forest_glass sameAs Szkło_brodawkowe.
- Forest_glass sameAs m.03qg475.
- Forest_glass sameAs Q1759306.
- Forest_glass wasDerivedFrom Forest_glass?oldid=703769598.
- Forest_glass depiction Roemer_Waldglas.jpg.
- Forest_glass isPrimaryTopicOf Forest_glass.