890 lines
47 KiB
Markdown
890 lines
47 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Textiles Activities in Context. An Example of Craft Organization in Meroitic Sudan"
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authors: ["elsayvanez.md"]
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abstract: In Sudan and Nubia, textile implements such as spindle whorls and loom
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weights are common finds, especially in the excavations of both rural
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and urban Meroitic settlements. This paper will focus on restoring the
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textile implements to their archeological locations in order to identify
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and understand the context of textile activities within the two
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settlements of Tila Island and Meroe-city. The two sites -- a small
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rural settlement on one hand and the royal capital city on the other
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hand -- offer various examples of how craft production was integrated
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amidst the Meroitic urban landscape. From domestic production inside
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living quarters to the creation of multi-tasking industrial areas, the
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making of textiles was tightly woven into the economic fabric of the
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Meroitic kingdom.
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keywords: ["Meroitic settlements", "craft organization", "textile production"]
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---
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# Introduction
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The past two decades have seen the significant development of settlement
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excavations in Sudan,[^1] especially in the Meroitic heartland, in a region
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encompassing the capital city of Meroe, the surrounding riverine areas,
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and the Butana hinterlands. Along the eastern bank of the Nile, the
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Meroitic urban landscape is now defined by a chain of cities regularly
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spaced every *c.*10 km, from Dangeil in the North to Wad ben Naga in the
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South.[^2] Recent discoveries in Central Sudan and the Gebel Barkal
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region, as well as renewed studies of previous excavation results from
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Nubia and the city of Meroe, have noticeably increased our knowledge of
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the Meroitic urban life.[^3] Meroitic town structure and organization
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are also better understood, thanks to the excavation of various
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settlements such as el-Hassa,[^4] Damboya,[^5] Hamadab,[^6] or
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Muweis.[^7] These settlements show a consistent urban model built around
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a monumental center -- consisting of a temple, a palace, and/or an
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administrative building -- incorporated into residential quarters with
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domestic and industrial functions. The study of the material unearthed
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in these settlements has prompted a renewed interest in crafts and their
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integration in the economy of the Meroitic kingdom.[^8] Among the
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various crafts represented, textile activities are certainly ubiquitous:
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textile implements are common finds, mainly characterized by a large
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number of spindle whorls and loom weights.[^9] This body of evidence
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offers particularly interesting counterpoints to other textile
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implements discovered in Lower Nubia, which tend to come more often from
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funerary contexts. The sum of this material, added to the thousands of
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well-preserved textile fragments from the Meroitic and Postmeroitic
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periods, paint a vivid image of textile production and uses in ancient
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Sudan and Nubia.
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The spectrum of data coming from the entire geographical span of the
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Meroitic kingdom presents the rare opportunity to proceed to a
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modern-standard post-excavation analysis of textile production. We now
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have at our disposal a vast number of sources recording textile
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manufacturing and uses: raw material (textile fibers and
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archaeobotanical remains), textile production implements, finished
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fabrics, pieces of both clothing and furnishing textiles, archaeological
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information on the contexts of textile use and reuse, and iconographic
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representations of people wearing different types of garments.[^10] In
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fact, the only "missing" sources are iconographic representations of the
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craft itself (scenes showing the process of spinning and weaving for
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example) and textual data such as written accounts or literary
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sources.[^11]
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The study of these different archaeological sources can lead to a
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comprehensive overview of textile production, which shows that textiles
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were deeply embedded in the social fabric of Meroitic life. This
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Meroitic "textile network" encompassed various spheres of the society,
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from agriculture and fiber collection to the cloth's manufacturing
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*chaîne opératoire*, all the way through the multiple every day uses and
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reuses of the fabrics to their final internment with the deceased. The
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sources and their relations can be summarized in a diagram displaying
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the interdependence between textiles and their production context
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(Fig.1).
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Despite the inherent limitations of such theoretical models, this
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diagram successfully illustrates the textile artefacts within their own
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production environment. It highlights the results of a complex *chaîne
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opératoire* based on the interactions between resources (both raw
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materials and human resources), technology, and society. This outlook
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has been the underlying theme of recent research in ancient textile
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studies, which has led to noticeable advances in our understanding of
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past economies.[^12] However, its application in the Nile valley remains
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restricted, with the exception of Barry Kemp and Gillian
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Vogelsang-Eastwood's study on the New Kingdom textile industries of
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Amarna.[^13]
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At the crossroads between Meroitic archaeology and ancient textile
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studies, this paper aims to explore the relationship between textile
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activities and the economy by focusing on the organization of textile
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production, especially on its integration into the living environment of
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the Meroitic population. Tila Island and the city of Meroe will provide
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two helpful case studies: by replacing textile implements in their
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archaeological locations -- within houses and settlements -- the present
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author hopes to identify the different types and scales of textile
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production occurring in Sudan.
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# Sources Documenting Textile Production in Meroitic Settlements
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Spinning tools are by far the most prominent material source, especially
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the spindle whorls, which survived in the archaeological record in a
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much greater number than other wooden or metallic spindle pieces. Found
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at Ballana in grave B58, a complete spindle[^14] provides a reliable
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example of this type of tools, its construction and use (Fig. 2). This
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simple tool is composed of a spindle shaft and a whorl, placed at the
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top and secured by the insertion of a metal hook that was used to attach
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the newly formed yarn. In the hand or suspended and then set in motion,
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the tool rotates to twist the fibers together and form the thread.
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Regardless of the specific spinning technique, the spindle whorl acts as
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a flywheel, which increases the momentum of the spindle and maintains a
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longer and faster rotation. In Meroitic Sudan, spindle whorls were made
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of various materials such as ceramic, unbaked clay, wood, bone, stone,
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or pierced potsherds.[^15] Despite this apparent material diversity,
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there is an interesting dichotomy between the artefacts recovered in
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Nubia, which favored turned wooden whorls, and those from Central Sudan,
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where decorated ceramic was clearly preferred (see Figs. 3, 5, 8).
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Other types of implements -- used for weaving this time -- contribute
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additional material evidence of textile production. Due to the rare
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preservation of organic material on settlement sites, it has proved
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impossible to recognize with any certainty the wooden beams that made up
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ancient looms. However, frequent discoveries of pear-shaped weights
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indicate that, in Meroitic Sudan and Nubia, most weaving was done on a
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vertical loom called the "warp-weighted loom", in which the warp threads
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were drawn tight by a series of loom weights.[^16] Often found in sets,
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loom weights could be made of stone or more commonly unbaked clay (see
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Figs. 4, 7). Small picks or spatulas made of bone or wood (see Fig. 5)
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have also frequently been associated with weaving, but their exact use
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remains unclear and open to debate.[^17] They may have been used to pack
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the threads down on small and delicate areas of the weave or to correct
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mistakes and seem particularly useful for tapestry weaving.
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During settlement excavations, spindle whorls, loom weights, and weaving
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picks are generally found in the filling of rooms and passageways, or in
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refuse deposits. They are seldom clearly associated with one specific
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context of floor level preserved *in situ*. This situation is
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particularly true in dense habitation quarters and long-lived towns,
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where many centuries of continued occupation and blowing sands have
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obscured the stratigraphy. For example, at Qasr Ibrim, hundreds of
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spindle whorls, as well as many loom weights and several comb beaters
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were found in the refuse deposits and the storage pits that filled the
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houses along "Tavern Street" and the alley itself.[^18] Nevertheless,
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the careful study of selected contexts of discovery at Tila and Meroe,
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both well preserved and documented, can be combined with knowledge on
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the Meroitic textile *chaîne opératoire* to offer engaging elements of
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interpretation.
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# Textile Activities on Tila Island
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The rocky island of Tila was located between the Semna and Attiri
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rapids, offering a small and protected bay where it was possible to
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anchor boats during the crossing of the Batn el-Haggar cataract. This
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enviable situation led researchers to identify Tila as a station on the
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Nilotic trading route to the Aniba basin and then towards Egypt.[^19]
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Facing the bay, this small Meroitic settlement was located on a rocky
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outcrop. It was excavated by A.J. Mills and J. Knustad between 1966 and
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1968, as part as the UNESCO-Sudan Antiquities Service survey, and then
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extensively studied by D.N. Edwards.[^20] The excavation revealed a
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settlement surrounded by a substantial enclosure wall covering a surface
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of about 2.25 hectares. It contains 11 buildings or building complexes
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dated from the 1st century to the end of the 3rd century C.E.
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According to estimations, Tila's population remained quite limited,
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totaling between 56 and 102 people at a time, divided into about 20
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households. Despite the small scale of Tila's settlement, an important
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number of textile implements were discovered scattered in the different
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buildings. The cross-study of excavation dairies, object inventories,
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and available drawings and plans, led to the localization of most of the
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tools and the reconstitution of their original context of use and
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discovery. This article will focus on four significant examples: houses
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VI, V, II and I.
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*House VI* (Fig. 3)
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House VI is formed by several living units and presents the same
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standardized house plan visible in other houses at Tila: a series of
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small rooms distributed around a central courtyard and directly opened
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to this outdoor space.[^21] This architectural model, well suited to the
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Nubian climate, was coined by the excavators "house with loggia". A
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total of four bone picks were discovered in House VI: one in an open
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courtyard (room 9) and three scattered across the building. Two spindle
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whorls and two loom weights were also found in the filling. The
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excavation of House VI revealed several floor layers preserved *in
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situ*. In the northern house unit, level 1 gave us one spindle whorl and
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a set of three loom weights in a "loggia" type of room (room 3), open to
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the courtyard (room 4), while another set was found in an adjacent
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storage room (room 1). Level 2 gave us a second set of three loom
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weights, also found in a room open to the central courtyard (room 5).
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*House V*
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House V[^22] continues to illustrate the use of the central courtyard
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for light textile work such as sewing. A long copper alloy needle was
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discovered in the large open space. In a small room, a bone pick was
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found inside a jar half-buried in the floor and containing small
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nail-like metal objects and a pin. This vessel was clearly used as a
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storage container for small, pointed objects, which could all have
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fulfilled similar functions.
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*House I* (Fig. 4)
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The first occupation level in House I was relatively well preserved
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under brick rubble.[^23] The structure consists of a roughly rectangular
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building centered around a courtyard, with a series of three utilitarian
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rooms along the west side for storage and cooking activities, one room
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on the north side, a large single room on the east side, and a possible
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staircase to the roof. The eastern room -- the "loggia" -- was most
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likely opened at least partially to the courtyard. An interesting group
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of varied textile implements was found in House I, directly *in situ* or
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inside the fill layers above the floors:
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House exterior, directly along the southern wall: two sets of
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respectively 3 and 20 loom weights.
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Central courtyard (room 8): 1 loom weight and 1 bone pick.
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Kitchen area (room 3): 1 loom weight.
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Storage area (room 5): 1 set of 3 loom weights.
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"Loggia" (rooms 12-13): 3 loom weights and another "large group of loom
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weights" (excavation diaries, number unspecified).
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It is unfortunate not to have a precise number for the "large group of
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loom weights" found in the "loggia", as this information could have
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helped us determine the number and size of the looms that could have
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been working at the same time in this building. However, it is clear
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that the "loggia", with its protected but well-lit space, would have
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been perfectly suited to weaving activities. The concentration of these
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different types of textile tools and the possible presence of several
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looms in the loggia are rather striking for a small structure such as
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House I.
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*House II* (Figs. 5-6-7)
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House II is a building complex formed by at least nine different housing
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units.[^24] Textile tools were found dispersed without distinction
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throughout many rooms and occupation levels. The inventories
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specifically list seven bone picks (Fig. 5), two spindle whorls, and one
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needle. The various locations of their discovery offer another
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illustration of the different kinds of storage and/or refuse contexts
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where textile implements can be found. In the case of House II, they
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appeared in the kitchen area, in a small, vaulted storage chamber, and
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in a storage area with jars. A group of two spindle whorls and one bone
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pick was also discovered discarded in a small cellar, which appears to
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have been used as a latrine (Fig. 6).
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Beside the tools listed in the inventories, the archives also provided a
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very useful excavation photograph that comes to complete the object list
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from House II. The image (Fig. 7) shows about 350 loom weights, all
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pear-shaped and made of unbaked clay, neatly arranged in small groups of
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about ten specimens on a sandy surface overlooking the building remains.
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Taken shortly after the excavation of the complex in March 1968, the
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photograph (ref. F/445: 6) is captioned "House II collection of loom
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weights". In the present state of the documentation, it is difficult to
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be absolutely sure that all loom weights shown on the photograph were
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indeed found in House II, or if they correspond to different groups
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unearthed on the site since the previous year excavations (such as the
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"large group of loom weights found in House I?) and only collected
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there. The caption seems however to point towards a sole discovery in
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House II. In any case, it seems that a very big group of loom weights
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was indeed found in this large complex, possibly spread around different
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rooms and/or occupation layers.
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If we attempt to summarize the data relative to loom weights, we reach a
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total of at least 389 specimens, which doesn't include the groups of
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unspecified number found in Houses I and VI. To our knowledge, it is the
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largest group of such implements ever discovered in Sudan and Nubia.
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Table 1. Summary count of loom weights per structure at Tila Island.
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As a whole, information related to textile production at Tila shows that
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spinning, weaving, and sewing were all practiced together within the
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same domestic structures. Spinning was carried out everywhere in the
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house, probably at the same time as other domestic activities such as
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food preparation. On the other hand, weaving is much more reliant on
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adequate positioning of the loom, sufficient space, and optimal lighting
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conditions. At Tila, it occurred within well-lit spaces, in the open or
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semi-open rooms leading to the courtyard (e.g. the "loggias") or on one
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occasion directly alongside the house perimeter, thereby taking
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advantage of the Nubian climate and domestic architecture. The looms
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were most likely leaning against the wall, protected from direct
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sunlight by the "loggia's" roof or a light structure such as an awning.
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When not in use, textile implements could be placed in storage and
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service areas often associated with culinary functions. Attested in both
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Sudan and other geo-historical areas, the frequent association of
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textile implements with remains of other household tasks, such as food
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preparation, led some researchers to believe that textile making must
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have been a primarily female activity[^25] and linked it to the basic
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sustenance strategy of the household.
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However, the number of textile implements at Tila, especially associated
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to weaving, seems to tell a rather different story. On one hand, Houses
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V and VI, with their rather limited corpus, could point towards a
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domestic production with no specialization of space or person. There,
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the scale of the production seems to have been limited, the data clearly
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indicating a local manufacture and consumption. On the other hand, the
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large groups of loom weights found in House II and presumably House I
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could have supplied the installation of several looms, conjointly
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operated by a small group of weavers working on different pieces of
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fabric at the same time. The production output would have increased
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significantly, becoming easily superior to the households' needs. The
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sum of this data clearly shows the importance of textile activities on
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Tila Island, which is particularly noticeable and surprising for such a
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small settlement.
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# Textile Activities at Meroe
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Textile activities are well represented in the capital city of Meroe.
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The objects were mainly discovered between 1965 and 1984 during P.L.
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Shinnie's excavations[^26] and, to a lesser extent, during earlier works
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conducted by J. Garstang in the Amun temple,[^27] as well as recent
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excavations.[^28] Most of the textile implements, predominantly spindle
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whorls, were sent to the Sudan National Museum while a smaller group
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joined the collections of the Petrie Museum in London. Research in those
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two museums, as well as through the publications and object inventories,
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have led to the identification of 238 spindle whorls, 110 loom weights,
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1 needle, and 1 spool with cotton threads still attached.[^29] This
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corpus of material forms the second largest group of textile-related
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tools in Sudan. Its quantity is significant but by no means very large;
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by comparison, the biggest corpus is estimated at about 3000 spindle
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whorls and comes from the southern site of Abu Geili.[^30] Outside of a
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small group of spindle whorls and loom weights without context
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information, it was possible to locate most of the artefacts discovered
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during excavations, mainly along trenches and test pits:
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Table 2. Summary of textile tools per context, Meroe.
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The Meroe spindle whorls form a homogeneous group made of well-burnished
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ceramic in conical or biconical shapes, with the upper surface almost
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always decorated by incised or impressed patterns (Fig. 8). The
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specimens from the oven area (M260) were likely found within their
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manufacturing context, as they were accompanied by several other small
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faience and ceramic objects produced within the temple's temenos.
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*Mound H*
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The seven spindle whorls and two loom weights from Mound H belong to
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domestic occupation levels, built on top of several layers of iron
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scories, wind-blown sand, and domestic refuse. The mudbrick structures
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offered a number of small rooms equipped with cooking installations. In
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this case, this test pit seems to reveal a small-scale textile
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production, probably linked to domestic activities, and integrated in a
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residential reoccupation level.
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*Trench TT6*
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A similar production profile emerges from the trench TT6 (Fig. 9). The
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majority of the tools found *in situ* belong to the oldest occupation
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level in two or three house buildings dated to the Early Meroitic
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period.[^31] Scattered throughout the buildings were sixteen spindle
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whorls, five loom weights, and one needle, thereby attesting three of
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the main stages of the textile *chaîne opératoire*. For example, the
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house located in the I/J50 square contained six spindle whorls and two
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loom weights, while the neighboring building in the H/G50 square had
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||
three whorls and one weight. The other artefacts came from small
|
||
residential refuse deposits, often placed in pits, or abandoned
|
||
buildings, which the excavator dated to the Classic and Late Meroitic
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||
periods. These houses included many rooms and covered a significant
|
||
surface that probably accommodated numerous people. It is therefore not
|
||
surprising to find within their walls a great number of textile tools,
|
||
accumulated by several generations. The context of textile production is
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||
still domestic, here distributed along a residential street of Meroe.
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||
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*North mound*
|
||
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The northern part of the North mound was explored by three main trenches
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||
that revealed a dense settlement, organized into several building units
|
||
separated by narrow alleys. The numerous textile implements (128 spindle
|
||
whorls and 79 loom weights listed) were discovered scattered over the
|
||
different structures as well as inside intrusive layers of abandonment
|
||
and refuse deposits. The results of the first excavation campaigns,
|
||
along the trench 79/80, provide us with the best contextual information.
|
||
While many of the tools come from multifunctional areas linked to
|
||
cooking and food storage, several groups of tools are associated to
|
||
specific spaces.
|
||
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||
For example, an interesting group of approximately thirty spindle whorls
|
||
was discovered in a large open-air space in front of buildings II.A and
|
||
II.B. Other crafts such as faience manufacturing and minor metallurgy
|
||
work were also carried out on the same terrace. This particular location
|
||
seems to have been used as a multifunctional public space, where Meroe's
|
||
inhabitants could practice small crafts and industries. Spinning, a very
|
||
portable activity, would have obviously been perfectly suited to this
|
||
type of multifunctional open space. It also reminds us of the
|
||
fundamental social dimension of spinning: it is long and fastidious
|
||
work, but it does not continuously engage one's attention, so it becomes
|
||
easy and much more agreeable to accomplish this task while chatting or
|
||
sharing small chores with other members of the community. Often
|
||
interpreted as a female activity, this "courtyard sisterhood" can be
|
||
observed in many populations, both ancient and modern.[^32] In African
|
||
cotton-producing countries, such as Mali for example, sorting cotton
|
||
balls, fiber preparation, and spinning traditionally take place in
|
||
courtyards and communal spaces where women gather to share the work and
|
||
exchange words.[^33]
|
||
|
||
Another group of textile implements came from building I.A, in squares
|
||
O79/80 and N79/80, a large structure distinguished by its peculiar
|
||
internal organization (Fig. 10).[^34] The building possesses an
|
||
important number of small rooms, probably storage rooms, and a large
|
||
L-shaped open courtyard where two spindle whorls were found. Its main
|
||
feature was the construction of a hydraulic system, west of the
|
||
courtyard. The structure started by a very deep well, which fed two
|
||
succeeding basins connected between each other by a narrow slopping
|
||
ramp, covered with waterproof plaster. Its exact function remains
|
||
unknown but its sole presence indicates the industrial character of the
|
||
building. A total of eighteen spindle whorls, three loom weights, and
|
||
one needle was found scattered throughout the rooms, to which we can
|
||
tentatively add a grinding stone fragment reused as a weight. It is very
|
||
tempting to link this group of textile implements to the hydraulic
|
||
artisanal installation and postulate the presence of a textile workshop
|
||
with decantation vats for dyeing. Unfortunately, the stratigraphic
|
||
evidence is not sufficient to pursue this attractive hypothesis any
|
||
further. No traces of dyes, pigments or hearth have been reported for
|
||
this specific space, therefore its use for dye preparation or leather
|
||
work remains one theory amidst others. It seems clear however, that
|
||
textile activities were an important aspect of the life of this
|
||
building, and that they were inserted within a mixed domestic and
|
||
industrial urban environment.
|
||
|
||
# Discussion
|
||
|
||
Despite the geographic distance between Tila and Meroe and their
|
||
fundamental difference in nature, the two settlements present a coherent
|
||
image of textile production in two regions of the Meroitic kingdom. As
|
||
in Tila, spinning, weaving, and sewing were all practiced together at
|
||
Meroe, within the same spaces and structures, resulting in tools
|
||
scattered amongst the buildings and public areas. Spinning is
|
||
particularly well attested in open-air spaces (such as courtyards,
|
||
streets, and alleys). As a whole, spinning and weaving were present in
|
||
both domestic and industrial or semi-industrial areas.
|
||
|
||
The data from Meroe is difficult to interpret with any certainty, as the
|
||
excavation campaigns differed in scale and methods. Trenches, squares,
|
||
and test pits provided windows into occupation phases that are now
|
||
difficult to reconcile. Building an overall understanding of each
|
||
structure remains elusive to this day. On such shaky grounds, one can
|
||
only propose a preliminary hypothesis stating the existence, at Meroe,
|
||
of two types of textile production. First, a limited production would
|
||
have occurred in domestic residential areas to fulfill the household's
|
||
needs, most probably without involving special workers or locations. The
|
||
second type of textile manufacturing appears to be a small-scale
|
||
industrial production taking place on the North mound, still in domestic
|
||
settings or semi-industrial areas embedded in a residential
|
||
neighborhood. The number of tools alone indicates a larger output of
|
||
textile production, maybe a limited surplus, which may have answered the
|
||
demands of the local administrative and religious elite. However, as far
|
||
as we know from the available data, textile making occurred in
|
||
multifunctional areas used for various crafts.
|
||
|
||
We have tried in this paper to describe the artefacts related to textile
|
||
production and to assign them to clear *loci* in the Meroitic urban
|
||
environment. We have also attempted to replace this production in the
|
||
larger textile economy. However, it is crucial to realize that this
|
||
evidence cannot be a true indicator of the scale of production in any
|
||
absolute terms.[^35] If tools can help us trace different stages of the
|
||
manufacturing process, many aspects of the Meroitic "textile market"
|
||
remains little known, such as the question of maintenance and reuse,
|
||
centralization of the production, or trade and exchange.[^36] A general
|
||
panorama can be drawn in broad strokes, merging different sources. It
|
||
seems that textile making was organized as either a domestic activity or
|
||
a small-scale industry, with a seemingly limited production output. No
|
||
true textile workshop has been identified yet in Meroitic Sudan. The
|
||
only location where such a production type was hypothesized is the Isis
|
||
temple at Qasr Ibrim, in levels dated to the very end of the
|
||
Postmeroitic era.[^37] The question of how to define a textile workshop
|
||
in a Meroitic context is difficult to answer, as the current theoretical
|
||
models do not apply to this type of region and socio-economic
|
||
organization.[^38] In the case of the Isis temple, the building did not
|
||
offer a specialized space or installation, and the production was
|
||
probably restricted to the temple's needs. In this framework, the
|
||
involvement of the central power and religious administration in the
|
||
control of textile production very much is still an open topic.
|
||
Nonetheless, the creation of a cohesive and distinct Meroitic tradition
|
||
(or "style") shows that textile production still obeyed a certain degree
|
||
of standardization, which agents and dynamics remain unknown. This small
|
||
industry was no doubt an important one, producing luxury fabrics in
|
||
cotton with blue decorations in tapestry and embroideries for the
|
||
confection of elite and royal clothing.[^39]
|
||
|
||
At first glance, this seems difficult to fit with the archaeological
|
||
context of tools found principally in domestic contexts. In many ways,
|
||
the data presented in this paper illustrates how deeply embedded textile
|
||
production was in the everyday life of the Meroites. Spinning and
|
||
weaving appear fully integrated in domestic spaces, either in share
|
||
public areas or in the house itself, regardless of the structure's size.
|
||
This proves to hold for both densely populated settlements such as Meroe
|
||
or spread around compounds in more rural settings such as Tila.
|
||
Furthermore, textile activities were not separated from other daily
|
||
tasks, but mixed with food production and other small crafts. We can
|
||
therefore infer that, whatever the size or economic weight of the
|
||
Meroitic textile industry, it rested principally on the domestic sphere
|
||
with a household-based workforce (either direct members of the family or
|
||
associated retainers).
|
||
|
||
How did textile activities affect the daily life of people living in
|
||
these settlements? In the absence of written account, we need to rely on
|
||
our knowledge of the textile *chaîne opératoire* and Meroitic settlement
|
||
organization to get a glimpse of the life experiences of textile craft
|
||
people. The number of tools from places such as Tila, Meroe's North
|
||
Mound, or Abu Geili certainly indicates that many people dedicated a
|
||
vast amount of time to process fibres and threads.[^40] Because spindle
|
||
whorls appear in varied contexts across settlements and because spinning
|
||
is a portable and time-consuming activity, we can imagine that several
|
||
individuals could be seen spinning in streets and other communal spaces
|
||
on a very regular basis. During the harvest season, we can also picture
|
||
a heighten activity involving more people and more time, as well as
|
||
installations to store the unprocessed fibres. Weaving on the other hand
|
||
seems to have been attached more often to a specific domestic structure,
|
||
especially to spaces open or semi-open to light and air. These
|
||
courtyards or "loggias" provided an ideal environment to weave in
|
||
relatively protected conditions, while still being able to interrupt
|
||
one's work and tend to other tasks, such as food processing or child
|
||
rearing.[^41] They are also vast enough to build looms accommodating
|
||
several weavers, if needed, and provided just enough space to keep a
|
||
loom active while not being in the way of other people or activities.
|
||
Thus, the rhythmic sounds of the loom weights and the shuttle can be
|
||
added to our sensory reconstruction of the Meroitic courtyards.
|
||
|
||
However, to precise this picture and truly understand the socio-economic
|
||
dimensions of textile activities, we need to learn more about who was
|
||
making textiles and what output could they possibly produce. We
|
||
therefore hope that new data coming from recent settlement excavations
|
||
and archival work will further enhance our understanding of textile and
|
||
craft activities, and the Meroitic domestic and economic landscapes.
|
||
|
||
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|
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|
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|
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||
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|
||
|
||
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||
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||
|
||
[^1]: This paper is the updated publication of a talk given at the
|
||
12th International Conference for Meroitic Studies, organized by
|
||
Pavel Onderka at Prague in September 2016, and reworked in 2022 as
|
||
part of the *Fashioning Sudan* project (ERC 101039416), funded by
|
||
the European Union. I thank the organizers of both the conference
|
||
and the present volume for their support.
|
||
|
||
[^2]: Baud, "Méroé, un monde urbain"; Wolf and Nowotnick, "The Meroitic
|
||
Heartland"; Grzymski[, "]{.smallcaps}The city of Meroe".
|
||
|
||
[^3]: Wolf, Nowotnick, and Edwards, \"Settlement in the Meroitic
|
||
Kingdom\".
|
||
|
||
[^4]: Rondot, "El-Hassa: un temple à Amon dans l'île de Méroé".
|
||
|
||
[^5]: Maillot, "The archaeological site of Damboya"; Choimet, "The
|
||
Meroitic settlement at Damboya".
|
||
|
||
[^6]: Wolf and Nowotnick, "Hamadab -- A Meroitic Urban Settlement";
|
||
Nowotnick[,]{.smallcaps} *Ceramic Technology, Production and Use,
|
||
passim.*
|
||
|
||
[^7]: Baud, "The Meroitic royal city of Muweis". Millet, "Mouweis, une
|
||
ville de l'Empire de Méroé".
|
||
|
||
[^8]: This volume is a perfect incarnation of this renewed interest, as
|
||
well as ongoing research projects such as the one on metallurgy led
|
||
by Jane Humphris (UCL Qatar) or G. Choimet's doctoral work, see
|
||
Choimet, "Habitat et urbanisme méroïtiques en Nubie et au Soudan
|
||
central". Reappraisal of archival documentation from the Nubian
|
||
campaign are also bringing new light on craft activities, notably
|
||
textiles (see Mann and van den Bercken, "Shokan. Revival of a
|
||
forgotten village". A similar dynamic was also at the root of the
|
||
Meroe Archival Project, reexamining the excavation archives of Peter
|
||
L. Shinnie from his work in settlement areas at Meroe.
|
||
|
||
[^9]: For a description of textile implements and activities in a
|
||
Meroitic and Postmeroitic context, see for example Adams and Adams,
|
||
*Qasr Ibrim: The Ballana Phase*, pp. 97-8., Yvanez, "De fil en
|
||
aiguille : aspects de l'artisanat textile méroïtique".
|
||
|
||
[^10]: Yvanez, "Clothing the elite? Patterns of textile production and
|
||
consumption".
|
||
|
||
[^11]: These sources are however well known for textile production in
|
||
pharaonic Egypt (e.g. Vogelsang-Eastwood, "Textiles") or the Ancient
|
||
Near East (Nosch[,]{.smallcaps} Koefoed and Andersson Strand.
|
||
*Textile Production and consumption in the Ancient Near East*).
|
||
|
||
[^12]: The aims and methods of recent textile research are usefully
|
||
exposed in Andersson Strand *et al*., "Old Textiles -- New
|
||
Possibilities" and Harlow and Nosch, "Weaving the Threads:
|
||
methodologies in textile and dress research".
|
||
|
||
[^13]: Kemp and Vogelsand-Eastwood. *The Ancient Textile Industry in
|
||
Amarna*. Studies developing a similar scope are however blossoming,
|
||
see e.g. the Marie Skłodowska Curie project EgYarn, led by C.
|
||
Spinazzi-Lucchesi (MSCA 890144. *Unravelling the thread: textile
|
||
production in New Kingdom Egypt*, Centre for Textile Research, Saxo
|
||
institute, University of Copenhagen, 2021-2022). Many Egyptian urban
|
||
sites continue to bring evidence of an extensive textile production,
|
||
contemporary with the Meroitic period in Sudan. See for example the
|
||
cases of Karanis (Thomas, *Textiles from Karanis*), Kellis (Bowen,
|
||
"A study of the textile industry at ancient Kellis"), or the
|
||
Roman-period forts of the Eastern desert (for a comprehensive
|
||
bibliography, see Bender Jørgensen, "Textiles from Mons Claudianus,
|
||
'Abu Sha'ar and other Roman sites").
|
||
|
||
[^14]: Williams, *Meroitic Remains from Qustul and Ballana*, vol. 1, p.
|
||
159, fig. 61e.
|
||
|
||
[^15]: Yvanez, "Spinning in Meroitic Sudan".
|
||
|
||
[^16]: For a description of the warp-weighted loom and its use, see
|
||
Barber, *Prehistoric Textiles*, pp. 91-113.
|
||
|
||
[^17]: [Kemp]{.smallcaps} and Vogelsand-Eastwood. *The Ancient Textile
|
||
Industry in Amarna*, pp. 358-73. See also Spinazzi-Lucchesi, *The
|
||
Unwound Thread*, pp. 91-3.
|
||
|
||
[^18]: Adams and Adams, *Qasr Ibrim: The Ballaña Phase*, p. 98.
|
||
|
||
[^19]: Edwards, "Appendix 3. The Meroitic settlement on Tila Island".
|
||
|
||
[^20]: Full publication of the archives forthcoming. I would like to
|
||
express all my gratitude to David N. Edwards who accepted to share
|
||
with me all the archival data pertaining to textile manufacture on
|
||
the site, and to dissect the archives to understand the exact
|
||
conditions of the tools' discovery.
|
||
|
||
[^21]: Edwards, "Appendix 3. The Meroitic settlement on Tila Island",
|
||
pp. 112-3.
|
||
|
||
[^22]: Edwards, "Appendix 3. The Meroitic settlement on Tila Island", p.
|
||
112, fig. 35.
|
||
|
||
[^23]: Edwards, "Appendix 3. The Meroitic settlement on Tila Island", p.
|
||
106, fig. 30.
|
||
|
||
[^24]: Edwards, "Appendix 3. The Meroitic settlement on Tila Island", p.
|
||
108-11, figs. 31, 32.
|
||
|
||
[^25]: Gender studies have always been an important part of ancient
|
||
textiles research (see for example "Women's Work", *in*
|
||
Barber[,]{.smallcaps} *Prehistoric Textiles*, pp. 283-98.). For a
|
||
modern scholarly perspective and references, see Harlow and Nosch
|
||
["]{.smallcaps}Weaving the Threads: methodologies in textile and
|
||
dress research", pp. [10-1.]{.smallcaps} If the link with the
|
||
household is clearly established in ancient Sudanese contexts, no
|
||
data pertaining to gender and a gendered differentiation of labor
|
||
has come to light.
|
||
|
||
[^26]: Shinnie and Bradley, *The Capital of Kush I*, and Shinnie and
|
||
Anderson[,]{.smallcaps} *The Capital of Kush II.*
|
||
|
||
[^27]: Török, *Meroe City, an ancient African capital*.
|
||
|
||
[^28]: More spindle whorls have been discovered during Jane Humphris's
|
||
excavations at Meroe for the UCL Qatar Sudan archaeological project.
|
||
Found in different contexts and under current study, these objects
|
||
have not been added to the present paper.
|
||
|
||
[^29]: At the time of this study, I was unfortunately unable to locate
|
||
any loom weight, nor the needle and spool, which whereabouts remain
|
||
unknown. Further investigations in the site storage rooms and in the
|
||
Khartoum University collections, as part of the Meroe Archival
|
||
Project, might increase and precise the present list (A. Boozer,
|
||
pers. comm.)
|
||
|
||
[^30]: Yvanez, "Spinning in Meroitic Sudan".
|
||
|
||
[^31]: Focused on test pits and trenches, the methodology followed by
|
||
P.L. Shinnie didn't allow for the excavation of complete building
|
||
structures. The objects are therefore attached to numbered
|
||
"squares", making their attribution to specific houses difficult and
|
||
hypothetical. For a description of excavation techniques and maps,
|
||
see Shinnie and Bradley, *The Capital of Kush I*.
|
||
|
||
[^32]: Barber, *Prehistoric Textiles*, pp. 84-6.
|
||
|
||
[^33]: Picton and Mack, *African Textiles*, p. 31.
|
||
|
||
[^34]: Shinnie and Bradley, *The Capital of Kush I*, pp. 64-5.
|
||
|
||
[^35]: Even in much better documented contexts, such as Pompeii,
|
||
relating traces of crafts to a greater economic organization remains
|
||
difficult, see Flohr, "The textile economy of Pompeii".
|
||
|
||
[^36]: Yvanez, "Precious textiles"; "Clothing the elite"; and Yvanez and
|
||
Wozniak, "Cotton in ancient Sudan and Nubia".
|
||
|
||
[^37]: Adams, "Sacred Textiles"; Adams and Adams, *Qasr Ibrim, The
|
||
Ballana Phase*, pp. 60-1, 129-37.
|
||
|
||
[^38]: Spinazzi-Lucchesi and Yvanez, "Textile workshops in the Nile
|
||
valley?".
|
||
|
||
[^39]: For a comprehensive view of Meroitic textile technics and
|
||
clothing, see Adams, "Sacred Textiles", Wild[, "]{.smallcaps}Fringes
|
||
and Aprons", Yvanez, "De fil en aiguille : aspects de l'artisanat
|
||
textile méroïtique" and "Clothing the elite? Patterns of Textile
|
||
Production and Consumption".
|
||
|
||
[^40]: [Yvanez]{.smallcaps}, "Spinning in Meroitic Sudan".
|
||
|
||
[^41]: [Barber]{.smallcaps}, *Women's work*. Textile crafts (especially
|
||
weaving) are frequently associated to mixed activities in domestic
|
||
settings, from contexts and production scales as different as Roman
|
||
Pompeii or Viking Age long houses, see [Flohr]{.smallcaps}, "Working
|
||
and Living Under One Roof" and [Andersson Strand]{.smallcaps},
|
||
"Engendering Central Places".
|