نویسنده
Unknown
تاریخ انتشار
600
محل انتشار
Egypt (made) Central Asia (made) Akhmim (made) -
موضوع
Archaeology Textiles Africa Death
نوع
دیگر
زبان
نامشخص
دیجیتال
بله
نسخه خطی
خیر
ابعاد فیزیکی
Length: 200mm, Width: 54mm
کتابخانه
Victoria and Albert Museum
شناسه دارایی کتابخانه
300-1891
شماره ثبت
300-1891
محل کتابخانه
Middle East Section
تاریخ
600
یادداشتها
A length of woven silk/samite. The warp is a dark cream and the weft is green and white (approx. 17x28 tpc). The centre of the piece is filled with geometric/pixelated versions of a man with a raised hand (?), animals, a tree and a floral icon. It is edged on both sides with a geometric border. Similar to 299-1891. Samite (twill woven silk) was thought to originate from Persia under Sassanian rule (AD224-651). It was commonly decorated with pairs of animals and birds and set in pearled lotus roundels. It is often found in Western burials, within church possessions and along the Silk Road. Byzantine weaving workshops took on the samite technique to make it an essential weave of the period. It was a luxury textile of the Middle Ages brought to Europe when the Crusades opened up direct contact with the East. It was forbidden to the middle classes of France under the sumptuary rules c. 1470.
Malzemeler ve teknikler
Woven silk Silk (Textile) Weaving Dyeing
Parçalar
Textile Fragment, Backing
Fiziksel açıklama
A length of woven silk/samite. The warp is a dark cream and the weft is green and white (approx. 28x17 tpc). The centre of the piece is filled with geometric/pixelated versions of a man with a raised hand (?), animals, a tree and a floral icon. It is edged on both sides with a geometric border. Similar to 299-1891.
Üslup
Coptic