Full Entry Details (Loom Weights in Bronze Age Central Europe 2019)

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Content Information  
 
Database ID   96
 
Title   Loom Weights in Bronze Age Central Europe 2019
 
Author(s)   Jutta Kneisel; Stefanie Schaefer-Di Maida
 
 
Contributors   Christoph Rinne, Anne Karl
 
Abstract   The present data collection contains loom weights from Central and Northern Europe of the Bronze and Iron Ages. In a diachronic overview and using the example of individual sites, the intensity and importance of textile production in the study area is investigated.
 
Description   This is a diachronic study on Bronze Age loom weights in Central Europe. The knowledge about textiles in the Únětice and Lusatian period is very small. More often, however, we find spindle whorls and the loom weights of the warp-weighted looms. They vary in shape and weight and are found in different contexts. In contrast to the spindle whorls, which are almost completely absent in the Únětice context, loom weights were selected for the present study. Since these occur both in the Early and Late Bronze Age. The frequency of the occurrence, their context and their shape are to be investigated. If measurements (weight and size) are available, this is considered in the analysis. A database with the data used for this article is available here. In contrast to the alpine area, the Central European types are limited to two basic forms: the cylindrical shape of the Neolithic and EBA and the pyramidal type from the LBA and EIA. The latter type extends in part even into the Roman Period. While in the Alpine region, South and South-East Europe, the larger range of types speak for a very individual and variable textile technology, the almost uniform shape of Central Europe points to a seemingly standardized textile production. In addition, the number of loom weights increases markedly from the Early Bronze Age to the Late Bronze Age. The increasing number of graves with loom weights in the Lusatian groups, scenic depictions of weaving, and rich women burials in the Iron Age prove, however, that the textile production is gaining in importance compared to older periods. In addition, the individual case studies show that in the Iron Age a division of labor between spinning and weaving, partly within the settlement, partly between fortified settlements and other sites could be assumed.
 
Keywords   Materials; Burnt Clay; Ceramic; Stone; Settlement; Funerary; Single Finds
 
Sources   
 
Language(s)   English; German
 
Publication(s)   
Jutta Kneisel / Stefanie Schaefer-di Maida, Loom Weights in Bronze Age Central Europe. In: Serena Sabatini/Sophie Bergerbrant (Hrsg.), The Textile Revolution in Bronze Age Europe. Production, Specialisation, Consumption (Gothenburg 2019) 80-116. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108656405
 
Collection Type   Research Data
 
Format   .xls; .pdf
 
Extent   25 MB
 
DNB DCC   930
 
Additional Information   Classification and typology of loom weights.
 
 
Spatio-Temporal Categorization  
 
Period(s)   Entire Bronze Age; Bronze Age unspecified; Iron Age Hallstatt; Iron Age unspecified
 
Period(s) Addition   
 
Other Classification   
 
Content Dating Start   2200 BCE
 
Content Dating End   500 BCE
 
Region(s)   Germany; Poland; Czech Republic; Austria; Switzerland; Italy; Hungary; Romania; Serbia; Slovakia; Bosnia; Denmark; Netherlands; Belgium; United Kingdom; Ukraine; Russian Federation
 
Region(s) Addition   Northern Europe, Central Europe, Alpine Region
 
Marker Position(s)   50.025, 14.344
 
 
Data Collection Process  
 
Project Reference(s)   CRC 1266; 290391021; D3
 
Created Start   2015
 
Created End   2018
 
Last Modified   2019
 
Published   11.09.2023
 
 
Meta Data Responsibility & Sharing  
 
Metadata Owner   Jutta Kneisel
 
Metadata Contact   Jutta Kneisel; jutta.kneisel@ufg.uni-kiel.de
 
Citation   Jutta Kneisel / Stefanie Schaefer-di Maida, Loom Weights in Bronze Age Central Europe. In: Serena Sabatini/Sophie Bergerbrant (Hrsg.), The Textile Revolution in Bronze Age Europe. Production, Specialisation, Consumption (Gothenburg 2019) 80-116
 
DOI   
 
Access to Dataset    https://opendata.uni-kiel.de/receive/fdr_mods_00000021?accesskey=2FgIPGmOV1lavaO33O9Tri99xgEASuVt   via OpenData Repo
 
License   CC BY-SA 4.0
 
 
Mergeable   True