Textile production in Quartier Mu

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Textile production in Quartier Mu. / Cutler, Joanne Elisabeth; Andersson Strand, Eva Birgitta; Nosch, Marie-Louise Bech.

I: Etudes Cretoises, Bind V, 2013, s. 95-118, pl. V 1-8, pl. 5.1.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Cutler, JE, Andersson Strand, EB & Nosch, M-LB 2013, 'Textile production in Quartier Mu', Etudes Cretoises, bind V, s. 95-118, pl. V 1-8, pl. 5.1.

APA

Cutler, J. E., Andersson Strand, E. B., & Nosch, M-L. B. (2013). Textile production in Quartier Mu. Etudes Cretoises, V, 95-118, pl. V 1-8, pl. 5.1.

Vancouver

Cutler JE, Andersson Strand EB, Nosch M-LB. Textile production in Quartier Mu. Etudes Cretoises. 2013;V:95-118, pl. V 1-8, pl. 5.1.

Author

Cutler, Joanne Elisabeth ; Andersson Strand, Eva Birgitta ; Nosch, Marie-Louise Bech. / Textile production in Quartier Mu. I: Etudes Cretoises. 2013 ; Bind V. s. 95-118, pl. V 1-8, pl. 5.1.

Bibtex

@article{8acd12a018ca498bb28217cdef018cde,
title = "Textile production in Quartier Mu",
abstract = " The most common archaeological evidence for weaving in the Aegean is the presence of loom weights, which indicate the use of the warp-weighted loom.  A wide variety of loom weight shapes have been recorded. In the past, this diversity has generally been explained in terms of cultural, geographical and chronological factors.  In contrast, recent research has considered some aspects of shape as an expression of loom weight function. This new approach, which draws on experimental archaeology, has made it possible to render textile craft visible, even if the textiles themselves are not preserved (M{\aa}rtensson et al. 2009). It is this approach that has been adopted in the following analysis of the loom weights from Quartier Mu.The chapter divided into four parts. The first part gives an outline of general textile techniques and presents the methodology. The second part consists of an overview of the Quartier Mu loom weights, whilst the third part focuses on their contexts. The results of the analysis are discussed in the fourth and final part. ",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, v{\ae}vev{\ae}gt, Bronzealder, textile production, loom weight, Crete, Bronze Age",
author = "Cutler, {Joanne Elisabeth} and {Andersson Strand}, {Eva Birgitta} and Nosch, {Marie-Louise Bech}",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
volume = "V",
pages = "95--118, pl. V 1--8, pl. 5.1",
journal = "Etudes Cretoises",
issn = "1105-2236",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Textile production in Quartier Mu

AU - Cutler, Joanne Elisabeth

AU - Andersson Strand, Eva Birgitta

AU - Nosch, Marie-Louise Bech

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 -  The most common archaeological evidence for weaving in the Aegean is the presence of loom weights, which indicate the use of the warp-weighted loom.  A wide variety of loom weight shapes have been recorded. In the past, this diversity has generally been explained in terms of cultural, geographical and chronological factors.  In contrast, recent research has considered some aspects of shape as an expression of loom weight function. This new approach, which draws on experimental archaeology, has made it possible to render textile craft visible, even if the textiles themselves are not preserved (Mårtensson et al. 2009). It is this approach that has been adopted in the following analysis of the loom weights from Quartier Mu.The chapter divided into four parts. The first part gives an outline of general textile techniques and presents the methodology. The second part consists of an overview of the Quartier Mu loom weights, whilst the third part focuses on their contexts. The results of the analysis are discussed in the fourth and final part.

AB -  The most common archaeological evidence for weaving in the Aegean is the presence of loom weights, which indicate the use of the warp-weighted loom.  A wide variety of loom weight shapes have been recorded. In the past, this diversity has generally been explained in terms of cultural, geographical and chronological factors.  In contrast, recent research has considered some aspects of shape as an expression of loom weight function. This new approach, which draws on experimental archaeology, has made it possible to render textile craft visible, even if the textiles themselves are not preserved (Mårtensson et al. 2009). It is this approach that has been adopted in the following analysis of the loom weights from Quartier Mu.The chapter divided into four parts. The first part gives an outline of general textile techniques and presents the methodology. The second part consists of an overview of the Quartier Mu loom weights, whilst the third part focuses on their contexts. The results of the analysis are discussed in the fourth and final part.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - vævevægt

KW - Bronzealder

KW - textile production

KW - loom weight

KW - Crete

KW - Bronze Age

M3 - Journal article

VL - V

SP - 95-118, pl. V 1-8, pl. 5.1

JO - Etudes Cretoises

JF - Etudes Cretoises

SN - 1105-2236

ER -

ID: 122549528