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The Genesis of the Textile Industry from Adorned Nudity to Ritual
Regalia documents and evaluates the changing role of fibre crafts
and their evolving techniques of manufacture and also their
ever-increasing wider application in the lives of the inhabitants
of the earliest villages of the Ancient Near East. It is a
broad-spectrum enquiry into fibre working in a broad swathe from
Mesopotamia across Persia and Anatolia to the Nile Valley. It
focuses, however, on the southern Levant from incipient sedentism
in the Natufian culture, c. 13,000 cal BCE to the Ghassulian
culture, c. 4500-3800/3700 cal BCE. This is the first comprehensive
study addressing the fibre technologies of the southern Levant on a
long chronological axis. Currently, fibre crafts play only a minor
role in archaeological thinking. This research demonstrates the
magnitude and also the indispensable role that fibre crafts have
played in the quotidian events, activities and practices of the
inhabitants of the region. It has created an awareness of the
substantial, often invisible, presence of fibre-craft products
which was hitherto lacking in archaeological thought.
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