In our article series we would like to add some points about the usage of silk textiles in the Early Medieval and in the Early Medieval reenactment. On our first article we check some interesting things about the origin of the material, and how it bacame the most desired luxury fabric in the world’s history.
History of silk
Ferdowsi the persian poem wrote his great epoch the Shahnameh (Book of Kings) around 1000. He wrote about the deeds of Sassanid kings and mix it waistly with the Sassanian mythology. At the beginning he wrote how the first kings crafted essential items for the world. Around here we read about the creation of silk.
He first wrought arms and oped for warriors
The door of fame. His Grace made iron yield;
He fashioned it to helmets, hauberks, breastplates,
And coats of armour both for man and horse.
His ardent mind achieved the work and made
Good store in fifty years. Another fifty
He spent on raiment fit for fight or feast;
And made of spun and floss silk, hair and cotton,
Fine fabrics, cloth of hair and rich brocade.
He taught to spin and weave, and when the stuffs
Were made he showed men how to full and sew them
Then to the joy of all he founded castes
But our story starts not here.
Bombyx mori
This „mayestic” creature, the silkworm (Bombyx mori) is responsible for the fabled material what we know as silk. During it’s transformation from bug to caterpillar, at the right moment the cocoon is boiled in hot water, and after this procedure from the cocoon we can spun the silk thread.
Silk Road(s)
The history of this precious fabric leads us back to the Ancient China. The earliest archeological finding is from a neolithic site, and it is 8 500 years old. This is not exactly the silk we are dealing with, this is a so called wild silk. The product of sericulture of the Bombyx mori also started it’s journey from China. From here, we have the first intricately woven archeological finds as well, what dates to the middle of the 1st millenia BC. Chinese were the first users and producers of the fabled fabric. They managed to keep the production methold in secret for a couple of centuries.
But around BC 200 the secret slipped out from their hands and nations around them started their own silk production. Koereans, Japanese, and in the middle of the IIth century AD, India also started to professionally produce silk.
The famous Silk Road wasn’t really a road, where silk was transported, but a network of multiple routes for trade of all kind of goods. The Western end of this trade network was what we know as Levant trade route. Thus we even could consider the British Islands to one of the most Western point of the Silk Road.
With this trade complex Chinese silk first appeared in Europe in the Roman Empire, where it was (of course) a highly apreciated material.
Byzantine silk
With time silk production spreaded to West. At the Early Medieval we can speak famous silk production centers in China, Central Asia and Persian terriotiries, where silk products reached European lands.
The Eastern Roman Empire was the next step of the spreading range. In the VIth century Emperor Justinian managed to get the secret of sericulture. He smuggled cocoons from India, with monks, who hid the cocoons in their bamboo canes, and thus Byzantine silk was born.
Like others, they tried to keep the silk production knowledge in secret. In their silk „factories” all the workers were women, who could not leave their workplaces or move to live elswhere without premission. Like the serfs.
Like the others, Byzantium preserved the secret for a couple of centuries. At the end it wasn’t leaked from their hands, but Muslims brought the secret towards to Europe. By this sabotage, sericulture started in Italy and in Spain in the XIth century. But that is the story for the High Medieval, what interest us is the silk in the Early Medieval Period.
From where silk came to Europe?
So in the period what interests us, there were these sources to obtain precious silk: According to the archeological finds from the Early Medieval times we can count with three big silk supporter regions to Europe: China, Central Asia with Persia (or Eastern Early Islamic silk), and of course Byzantium.
Source: Kazár Bazár
The article series are an extended version of the presentation of Mestellér János: Silk in the Viking Age – Points about the usage of silk textiles in the Early Medieval and in the Early Medieval reenactment. Presented in Bratislava, III. Fórum včasného stredoveku (III. Early Medieval Forum) in 2019. II. 02.
Literature:
Berta, N. – Harangi, F. – Nagy – K.E. –Türk, A.: New data to the research on 10th century txtiles from the Hungarian conquest period cemetery at Derecske-Nagymező-dűlő. www.hungarianarcheology.hu 2018.
Christensen, A. E. – Nockert, M.: Osebergfunnet : bind iv, Tekstilene. Oslo. 2006.
Eriksen, Åse: Med silke til Valhall, En studie av mønster og vevemetoder. In: FAGFELLEVURDERT VIKING, Norsk Arkeologisk Arbok, Vol: LXXX. 2017.
Fadlán, I: Beszámoló a volgai bolgárok földjén tett utazásról. Tr: Simon, R. Budapest 2007.
Füredi, Á.: Honfoglalás kori tarsolylemez Pest megyében a Bugyi-Felsőványi 2. sír. In: Archeológiai Értesítő 137 2012.
Frankopan, P.: The Silk Roads, A new history of the world. NewYork 2017.
Ierusalimskaja, A. A.: Moshtcevaya Balka, An unusual archeological site at the North Caucasus Silk Road. St. Petersburg 2012.
Jakunina, L. J.: O triech kurgannych tkaniach. Moscow 1940.
Kubarev, G.V.: The culture of the ancient Turks of the Altai (on the basis of burials). Novosibirsk 2005.
Orfinskaya, O. V.: Парчовое платье X в. из Гнездовского некрополя. In: St. Petersburg 2012.
Orfinskaya, O. V. – Zubkova, E.A.: The results of Investigation of the Textiles from Excavation of 2006 in Pskov. In: Archeological news 16 (2009). St. Petersburg 2010.
Vedeler, Marianne: Silk finds from Oseberg. Production and distribution of high status markers across ethnic boundaries. In: An offprint from Everyday Products in the Middle Ages. Creafts, Consumption and the Individual in Northern Europe c. AC 800-1600. Ed: Hansen, G. Ashby, S. Baug, I. Oxford 2015.
Vedeler, Marianne: Silk for the Vikings. Oxford 2014.
Watt, J. C. – Wardwell, A.E.: When Silk Was Gold: Central Asian and Chinese Textiles. New York 1997.
Online sources:
Firdausí: The Sháhnáma http://persian.packhum.org/main?url=pf%3Fauth%3D68%26work%3D001&fbclid=IwAR0PB_UCfLehUVNwqKNFwYI2s9xoOWuo76p_Arw7Y5dD0F0vzIJXl94O1AQMarya Kargashina’s Medieval Research – Novgorod to Three Mountains
https://kargashina.wordpress.com/Snell, M.: Silk production and Trade in Medieval Times
https://www.thoughtco.com/silk-lustrous-fabric-1788616