Textiles were a hugely important Roman industry yet, because of their perishable nature, only fragments remain. These twenty-two essays provide a detailed study of surviving fragments from across the Roman world, from the dry sands of Egypt to the Atlantic coast and the northern frontiers and beyond. The result is a comprehensive reconstruction of both everyday and exotic Roman clothing with information about the influences of fashion and of Roman weaving techniques. Written by friends and colleagues, the contributions are offered as a tribute to John Peter Wild whose own studies of Roman textiles have been the inspiration of so much recent work.
Table of Contents
Roamn Egypt and Nubia 1. Mons investigating Roman textiles in the desert Lise Bender Jogensen and Ulla Mannering 2. On the road to a piece of tunic in damask weave from Didymoi Dominique Cardon 3. Two wide-sleeved linen tunics from Roman Egypt Frances Pritchard and Christ Verhecken-Lammens 4. Varia textiles from a Roman army dump Nettie K. Adams and Elisabeth Crowfoot 5. Goat-hair textiles from Karanis, Egypt Jane Batcheller Contact with Asia 6. Two resist-dyed cottons recently found at Karadong, Xinjiang, (3rd centuary AD) Sophie Desrosiers, Corinne Debaine-Francfort and Abdurassul Idriss 7. A re-consideration of the human-figure emblems excavated in the at-Tar Caves in Iraq Kazuko Sakamoto 8. Was there Greek or Roman influence on Sasanian women's clothing? Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood Europe, inside and outside the Frontier 9. Recent discoveries of gold textiles from Augustan Age Gadir (Cadiz) Carmen Alfaro Giner 10. Roman textiles in Switzerland Antoinette Rast-Eicher 11. Beyond the an Irish mantle and cloak Elizabeth Wincott Heckett 12. The Orkney hood, re-dated and recnsidered Thea Gabra-Sanders 13. Recent textile finds of the Roman period in Poland Jerzy Maik 14. The early the start of a new textile project Johanna Banck-Burgess 15. Recent analysis of the textiles from Bokener Moor and Vaaler Moor, Germany Klaus Tidow 16. A typical costume of te North German Iron Age? Some observations during conservation of the Bernuthsfeld 'plaid' Later Strands 17. From the Roman horizontal loom to the 3/1 twill damask loom of the early medieval period Daniel De Jonghe 18. A previously unrecognised Lion Silk at Canterbury Anne Muthesius 19. The re-appearance of an old Roman loom in medieval England Penelope Walton Rogers 20. Where are the Romans? Classical influences on women's fashionable dress from the late eighteenth to the twentieth century Naomi Tarrant 21. The contribution of experimental archaeology to the research of ancient textiles Elizabeth Peacock John Peter a bibliography