Ancient textile production from an interdisciplinary perspective : humanities and natural sciences interwoven for our understanding of textiles

Weitere Verfasser: Ulanowska, Agata , [HerausgeberIn]
Grömer, Karina , [HerausgeberIn]
Vanden Berghe, Ina , [HerausgeberIn]
Öhrman, Magdalena , [HerausgeberIn]
Ort/Verlag/Jahr: Cham : Springer, [2022].
Umfang/Format: x, 338 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Schriftenreihe: Interdisciplinary contributions to archaeology
Schlagworte:
Inhalte/Bestandteile: 17 Datensätze
Inhaltsangabe:
  • List of contributors
  • Part I: About this volume and textile research in 2020
  • Chapter 1. Introduction (Agata Ulanowska, Karina Gromer, Ina Vanden Berghe and Magdalena Ohrman)
  • Chapter 2. Old Textiles New Possibilities. Ten Years on (Eva Andersson Strand, Ulla Mannering and Marie-Louise Nosch)
  • Part II: Interdisciplinarity of Colour: Dye analyses and dyeing technologies
  • Chapter 3. Monobromoindigo: The Singular Chromatic Biomarker for the Identification of the Malacological Provenance of Archaeological Purple Pigments from Hexaplex Trunculus Species (Zvi C. Koren)
  • Chapter 4. Sasanid Dyes from Ancient Persia Case Study Chehrabad in Northern Iran (Ina Vanden Berghe and Karina Gromer)
  • Part III: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Textile Tools
  • Chapter 5. Textile Production in Some Early Neolithic Settlements in North Macedonia (Zlata Blazeska and Jasemin Nazim)
  • Chapter 6. Tradition versus Innovation? Horizontal (Ground-) and Vertical (Warp-weighted) Looms at Koukonisi, Lemnos (Tina Boloti)
  • Chapter 7. Weaving Traditions in Archaic Sicily: The Case Study of Portella SantAnna (Gabriella Longhitano)
  • Chapter 8. Visible Tools, Invisible Craft: An Analysis of Textile Tools across the Iron Age South Coast of Britain (Lewis Ferrero)
  • Chapter 9. Combing the Data: Re-evaluating Weaving Combs in the Textile Production Sequence During the British Iron Age (Jennifer Beamer)
  • Chapter 10. From Use Wear to User: Working with Literary Sources on Worn Textile Tools (Magdalena Ohrman)
  • Part IV: Traditions and Contexts: Fibres, Fabrics, Techniques, Uses and Meanings
  • Chapter 11. Lime Bast Winning: Know-How, Labour Input and Quantity Needed for the Production of Two Selected Neolithic Finds (Sabine Karg)
  • Chapter 12. Food for Thought or Threads for Weaving: Can we Identify the Uses for Ancient Flaxseeds Discovered in the Southern Levant? (Deborah Cassuto, Andrea Orendi and Itzhaq Shai)
  • Chapter 13. The Relationship between Textile Remains in a Hoard of Alexander II Zabinas Coins and Loom Weights Discovered at Hellenistic Tell Iztabba (Beth Shean, Nysa-Scythopolis), Israel (Orit Shamir, Achim Lichtenberger and Oren Tal)
  • Chapter 14. Unravelling the Threads of the Nubian Openworks. New Inquiries on a Unique Textile Tradition from Meroitic Sudan (c. 350 BCE350 CE) (Elsa Yvanez and Ulrikka Mokdad)
  • Chapter 15. Interdisciplinary Methods and New Perspectives on Inscribed Textiles: A Case Study of Christian Tiraz (Julia L. Galliker and Helga Rosel-Mautendorfer)
  • Chapter 16. Weaving Experiments with the Rigid Heddle: Woven-in Metal Spirals from Siksala and Auleja technique (Ronja Lau)
  • Part V: Digital Tools
  • Chapter 17. Investigating Relations between Textile Production and Seals and Sealing Practices in Bronze Age Greece: A Presentation of the New Textile and Seals Project Database (Agata Ulanowska)
  • Chapter 18. 3D Visualization of the 2400-Year-Old Garments of Salt Man 4 from Chehrabad, Iran (Aleksei Moskvin, Karina Gromer, Mariia Moskvina, Victor Kuzmichev, Abolfazl Aali and Thomas Stollner).