• British Museum Research Laboratory File 1144, letter dated 20.11.62. Brill R.H. (dy1965) ‘The chemistry of the Lycurgus Cup’,Proc 7th Internat.
  • One of the most impressive glass-made objects on display at the British Museum is the luxurious Roman cage cup known as the Lycurgus Cup.
  • Lycurgus Cup. This Week in London – Sutton Hoo rediscovered; The Sixties at Tower Bridge; and, the British Library celebrates spring…
  • This magnificent glass cage cup is is decorated with scenes from the myth of Lycurgus, a king from Thrace. Lycurgus attacked Dionysos, the Greek god of wine...
  • The Lycurgus Cup is a cup from the Roman era constructed of dichroate glass and depicting the legend of the Thracian king Lycurgus.
  • Freestone, Ian Meeks, Nigel Sax, Margaret and Higgitt, Catherine 2007. The Lycurgus Cup — A Roman nanotechnology.
  • Date Photographed: 3 July 2004. Description: London, England: British Museum: Lycurgus Cup (backlit) (4th century AD, probably carved in Rome).
  • Discover the remarkable Lycurgus Cup from Ancient Rome and learn about how advanced technologies of the past can be lost to history.
  • ...cup seems to be one of the earliest uses of dichroic glass, the goblet is over 1,600 years old, was created by the romans and can be viewed in the british museum.
  • Elsner, Jaś, "The Lycurgus Cup", Chapter 12 in New Light on Old Glass: Recent Research on Byzantine Mosaics and Glass, 2013, British Museum...