Type

Text

Type

Dissertation

Advisor

Shea, John | Zimansky, Paul | Twiss, Katheryn | Hildebrand, Elisabeth | Mazow, Laura.

Date

2016-12-01

Keywords

Archaeology -- Textile research | Iron Age, Levant, Loom Weight, Textile, Warp-weighted Loom, Weaving

Department

Department of Anthropology

Language

en_US

Source

This work is sponsored by the Stony Brook University Graduate School in compliance with the requirements for completion of degree.

Identifier

http://hdl.handle.net/11401/77687

Publisher

The Graduate School, Stony Brook University: Stony Brook, NY.

Format

application/pdf

Abstract

This thesis presents a comparative study of textile tools and textile remains from the Iron Age II (c. 1000 – 500 BCE) Levant as a means to investigate textile production and procurement in international economies. Earlier studies interpret the increase in loom weights (components of warp-weighted looms) during the Iron Age II as evidence that weavers working with these looms were the predominant source of textiles in the Levant. Yet there is no consensus on the nature of the textiles woven on warp-weighted looms, which authors independently describe as fine trade commodities, tapestries for tribute payments, and coarse fabrics for households and agricultural industries. This study builds on results of Martensson et al.’s (2009) experimental weaving to describe a new approach for reconstructing the textiles woven with Iron Age II warp-weighted looms from loom weights. These reconstructions are compared to textile remains and textile impressions in order to describe the variation in fabrics that could have been woven with warp-weighted looms. Applied to loom weights from twelve Iron Age II sites, this method shows that Levantine warp-weighted looms were best suited for weaving multiple types of animal fiber (i.e. wool and goat hair) textiles rather than fine bast fiber (i.e. linen and hemp) fabrics. This demonstrates that Iron Age II society had multiple strategies to produce and procure textiles, some of which may have been overlooked due to ubiquitous evidence for warp-weighted looms. | This thesis presents a comparative study of textile tools and textile remains from the Iron Age II (c. 1000 – 500 BCE) Levant as a means to investigate textile production and procurement in international economies. Earlier studies interpret the increase in loom weights (components of warp-weighted looms) during the Iron Age II as evidence that weavers working with these looms were the predominant source of textiles in the Levant. Yet there is no consensus on the nature of the textiles woven on warp-weighted looms, which authors independently describe as fine trade commodities, tapestries for tribute payments, and coarse fabrics for households and agricultural industries. This study builds on results of Martensson et al.’s (2009) experimental weaving to describe a new approach for reconstructing the textiles woven with Iron Age II warp-weighted looms from loom weights. These reconstructions are compared to textile remains and textile impressions in order to describe the variation in fabrics that could have been woven with warp-weighted looms. Applied to loom weights from twelve Iron Age II sites, this method shows that Levantine warp-weighted looms were best suited for weaving multiple types of animal fiber (i.e. wool and goat hair) textiles rather than fine bast fiber (i.e. linen and hemp) fabrics. This demonstrates that Iron Age II society had multiple strategies to produce and procure textiles, some of which may have been overlooked due to ubiquitous evidence for warp-weighted looms. | 207 pages

Share

COinS
 
 

To view the content in your browser, please download Adobe Reader or, alternately,
you may Download the file to your hard drive.

NOTE: The latest versions of Adobe Reader do not support viewing PDF files within Firefox on Mac OS and if you are using a modern (Intel) Mac, there is no official plugin for viewing PDF files within the browser window.