Textile fragment

İsim Textile fragment
Yazar Unknown
Basım Yeri Akhmim (made) Egypt (made) -
Konu Textiles Archaeology Africa Death
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 125mm, Width: 85mm
Kütüphane: Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 338-1887
Kayıt Numarası 338-1887
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Notlar Compound woven silk, samite. Possibly Egyptian or Byzantine, ca. AD600-900. The piece has been attached to cardboard. The background is of small cheques in brown and white. Circles (10mm diameter) lie evenly across the fabric and contain either a trefoil/club motif or a geometric motif of a central dot with four arrow heads pointing in towards the dot. 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.
İlişki Caspar Purdon Clarke
Malzemeler ve teknikler Woven silk Silk (Textile) Weaving Dyeing
Fiziksel açıklama Compound woven silk, samite. The piece has been attached to cardboard. The background is of small cheques in brown and white. Circles (10mm diameter) lie evenly across the fabric and contain either a trefoil/club motif or a geometric motif of a central dot with four arrow heads pointing in towards the dot.
Kaynağa git Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru Victoria and Albert Museum

Textile fragment

Yazar Unknown
Basım Yeri Akhmim (made) Egypt (made) -
Konu Textiles Archaeology Africa Death
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 125mm, Width: 85mm
Kütüphane Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 338-1887
Kayıt Numarası 338-1887
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Notlar Compound woven silk, samite. Possibly Egyptian or Byzantine, ca. AD600-900. The piece has been attached to cardboard. The background is of small cheques in brown and white. Circles (10mm diameter) lie evenly across the fabric and contain either a trefoil/club motif or a geometric motif of a central dot with four arrow heads pointing in towards the dot. 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.
İlişki Caspar Purdon Clarke
Malzemeler ve teknikler Woven silk Silk (Textile) Weaving Dyeing
Fiziksel açıklama Compound woven silk, samite. The piece has been attached to cardboard. The background is of small cheques in brown and white. Circles (10mm diameter) lie evenly across the fabric and contain either a trefoil/club motif or a geometric motif of a central dot with four arrow heads pointing in towards the dot.
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
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