Researchers find 3,500-year-old loom that reveals textile revolution
8 hours ago
- #Bronze Age
- #Textile Revolution
- #Archaeology
- Researchers discovered a 3,500-year-old loom at the Bronze Age settlement of Cabezo Redondo in Villena, Spain.
- The loom's preservation was due to a fire that charred and sealed the site, preserving wooden components, clay weights, and esparto ropes.
- The loom is one of the few known cases in Mediterranean Europe where both loom weights and wooden components have been preserved.
- The loom was identified as a vertical warp-weighted loom, with 44 cylindrical weights and pine timbers.
- The wooden components were made from Aleppo pine, indicating careful material selection.
- The loom is part of the 'textile revolution' in the European Bronze Age, involving technological and social changes in textile production.
- The context suggests textile production was a cooperative effort among household groups.
- Bioanthropological evidence points to women playing a central role in textile activities.
- Cabezo Redondo was a key regional hub with political and economic significance during the second millennium BCE.
- Future research may include archaeometric analyses of fibres and isotopic studies of sheep to understand raw material origins and production specialisation.