Minoan Textiles
For millennia, women in
particular sat together, spinning, weaving and sewing, but because textiles are
perishable, early textiles are not easy to find. Even when we look back at
Egypt, Mesopotamia and Greece, very few ancient literary records are
devoted to women, so we have few sources to consult. The Minoans are an
exception.
The Minoans flourished during the Bronze Age (3300-1200 BC) and belong to the group of civilisations archaeologists sometimes refer to as “island cultures”, in that they were protected by sea, or, in the case of Egypt, a desert. Malta and Easter Island also belong to these categories.
Secure in their environment, they were able to develop and
prosper. By 2300 BC, the people of Crete had developed textiles
into a major art form. Before this, flax had been in use since Paleolithic
times, whereas wool as we know it today – woolly sheep as opposed
to hairy or kempy ones – was only introduced around 3500 BC. The people of Crete
turned the herding of these new woolly sheep into a major part of their
economy, and from this, a flourishing textile trade grew.
The first evidence of weaving manufacture in Crete comes from the
archaeological site of Myrtos in the South. Clay spindle whorls were found in
many rooms as though women were spinning everywhere, just as they have done in
rural Greece for centuries.
For most people, spindle whorls don’t look like much at all, but
as far as archeologists are concerned, they are a spectacular find. In one
room, archeologists also found evidence of shallow clay dishes specifically
designed for wetting linen thread as it is being worked. The ancient Egyptians
used such bowls as do the Japanese today. They also unearthed clay loom
weights, and significantly, these were not scattered throughout the dwellings
as were the spindle whorls. For whatever reason, Myrtos burnt down, and charred
oak beams were unearthed at the site. Because of the way some were found, it is
believed that looms with oak beams were set up on the flat rooftops. The looms
were the upright ones with clay weights, as the weaving loom with heddles that
most people associate with cloth-weaving would not be in wide use until much
later. Having said that, the Egyptians did sometimes use them alongside the
upright loom.
They exported their woollen textile goods to the Middle East and
other Mediterranean islands, in particular, Egypt. We can see just how much the
Minoans developed their textile skills from the tablets unearthed around the
palace of Knossos. Almost 2000 of these mentioned textile production. The
D-series at Knossos, which documents shepherds and their flocks, contains 984
fragments of tablets and 231 record cloth manufacture, 171 record textile
workers and 84 record wool. At Pylos, cloth via taxation is also documented
along with flax production. Through this Linear B documentation, we
can follow textile crops, the birth of lambs, targets for wool yields per
animal, collectors’ work, the assignment of wool to workers, the receipt of
finished fabrics, distribution of cloth and the storage in palatial magazines.
The records are so detailed, we can deduce how many km a year could be spun,
given that a spinner worked 10 hours a day for 300 days a year - 14,025 km
yarn/year spun on an 18g spindle whorl. Quite mind-boggling! Minoan Crete was
quite literally a super powerhouse when it came to textiles, particularly of
wool.
As Minoan trade flourished, the people developed their dyeing
skills. The main colours used were red, blue, yellow and white. Natural
plant dyes such as madder will give an orange-red, whereas the red from the
Kermes beetle gives an intense crimson. The excavations at Myrtos show that oak
was used for timber, strongly suggesting the presence of the Kermes beetle.
Yellow was obtained from the saffron lily, which was found on many Aegean
islands, particularly the island of Thera (present-day Santorini).
Vat dyes are more complicated to produce than natural dyes. Indigo
Blue is one such colour, and it wasn’t widely known for centuries, so it’s
likely that the Minoans used woad. Woad was already known to the ancient
Egyptians, who used it to dye the cloth wrappings for the mummies, and for
years it was assumed to be Indian Indigo. Woad is a flowering plant, and the
blue dye is produced from the leaves. Although it is native to the steppe and
desert zones of the Caucasus and Central Asia, woad has been cultivated
throughout Europe, especially in Western and Southern Europe, since
ancient times,
There is also Royal purple obtained from several
varieties of seashells such as murex. Excavations on Crete have unearthed many
shell heaps. Each little mollusk produces only a single drop of this beautiful
dye, so we can only imagine how many were needed to dye a single piece of
cloth. Some earthen floors have been found to contain crushed murex shells
as aggregate—an example of recycling from about 1500 BC.
The Egyptians mostly wore clothing made of flax, which is
harder to dye than wool, so naturally, this was a boom market for the
Minoans. We can see from paintings in Egyptian tombs from 2000 BC onwards
that the most popular patterns were blue heart-spirals with a red diamond
between each pair of double hearts on a white ground. Diagonal spirals with red
and blue rosettes were also popular. They must have been beautiful, as these
patterns existed long after the decline of the Minoans.
When it comes to dress, we get a glimpse of just how beautiful and
decorative Minoan costumes were from ceramics, figurines, the paintings in
Egyptian tombs, and the wall paintings of Akrotiri on Thera. These paintings
show just how advanced the Minoan civilisation had become. The Palace of
Knossos also shows the sophistication of the time, but it is from Akrotiri that
we see the finer details.
The predominance of female figures in authoritative and
ritualistic roles over male ones seems to indicate that Minoan society was, in
all likelihood, matriarchal. Certainly, the fact that the men were
often away trading meant that women took care of the home and did agricultural
work at the same time, which gave them tremendous power. For centuries, Cretan
men wore simple loincloths, sometimes with fancy borders and always fastened
with cinch belts, and it was the women who shone as far as
costumes went. In fact, they were extremely fashionable and would have been the
Parisiennes of their day. From early figurines of women, we see the bell-shaped
dress and open-top bodice, also with a cinch belt, but it is generally thought
that this is a representation. Two famous Minoan snake goddess figurines from
Knossos show bodices that circle their breasts. These striking figures are
probably goddesses, priestesses, or devotees, as they are dressed differently
from the way normal Cretan women dressed.
From pieces like the Agia Triada Sarcophagus at Knossos, we see
that Minoan women normally covered their breasts and priestesses in religious
contexts were probably the exception. The fact that women wore such elaborate costumes
shows us that women played a very important role in textiles and society in
general. While they wove and created them, the men traded them, especially to
Egypt. This trade brought back not only physical wealth but ideas, most notably
in the way the Minoans started to richly decorate their palaces and villas.
These wall paintings show that even the plainest of dresses were striped, while
the finest display a mind-boggling array of all-over patterns, including
interlocking grids of motifs, fringing, tassels and embroidery, which were
obviously advanced. Thick sashes, colourful hair-bands, sculpted aprons, hats,
and jewellery add to this astonishing array of beauty.
With the decline of the Minoans, textiles and costume changed,
reflecting yet another era in civilisation. During the transition
from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, women lost their social status, and by the
dawn of the Classical Age, were almost second-class citizens. They rarely went
out of the house except for religious festivals, and a maidservant did the
shopping. With women sequestered, the development of textiles, from a
commercial point of view, was taken up by men.
1 comment:
Fascinating! I love the detail about the shells that produced just a drop of blue dye.
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