Municipality of Nijmegen/Facebook

The Romans were excellent glazers, and an eye-opening testament to that fact was recently unearthed in the Dutch city of Nijmegen. A blue ruffled-glass bowl bearing hardly a scratch deserves a special place in a museum, say local archeologists.

The city recently announced the discovery of the bowl, which was found during excavations for a housing development in the neighborhood of Winkelsteeg, which rests along the Waal River.

Nijmegen is one of the oldest cities in the Netherlands, and while the locals practiced agriculture, the city itself was founded as a Roman fort and trading post.

Municipality of Nijmegen

“They (the locals) certainly had contact with the Romans,” said Pepijn van de Geer, an archeologist who is who is leading the excavation. He told the newspaper Der Gelderlander that the bowl was likely acquired by trading with the Romans. “They had a great need for leather and liked to buy cattle hides.”

Van de Geer also suggests that the local people, the Batavians, could have been in the service of the Roman armies, and that the bowl could have been taken home as part of a pay package.

Head of excavations Pepijn van de Geer; Municipality of Nijmegen

The bowl was made by allowing molten glass to cool around a mold, and the dramatic stripes were formed while the glass was cooling. It’s the presence of metal oxides within the glass that gives it such a deep blue coloration.

Municipality of Nijmegen

40 years ago, a cemetery was found in the Winkelsteeg area, where dishware and jewelry have also been excavated.

MORE: ‘Most Important Prehistoric Discovery in a Century’ Revealed by British Museum

ARTnews reports that a well has also been found, and that van de Geer and his team would like to explore the area more to see how the people of the past lived, and what crops they were growing.

(WATCH the video for this story below.)

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