1. Re-evaluating textile production and tool deposition at Danebury and the Environs Sites during the British Iron Age
- Author
-
Beamer, Jennifer Kay
- Subjects
Textile production ,Iron Age ,Iron Age Britain ,textiles ,archaeology ,archaeological textile studies ,prehistoric Britain ,Iron Age people ,tool deposition ,archaeological tools ,Danebury ,textile tools ,Danebury Environs Project ,cloth ,prehistoric societies ,Iron Age sites ,chai^ne ope´ratoire ,experimental archaeology ,loomweights ,combs ,needles ,fibre processing ,weaving ,thesis - Abstract
The methods, techniques and products of prehistoric textile production are being reassessed globally. A surge in academic interest relating to textiles and textile production has created new and fundamental methods for analysing and interpreting textile tools and how they fit within the 'chaîne opératoire', or operational sequence. The material from Iron Age Britain has undergone periodic re-evaluation and is due for a reassessment in light of new methodologies in archaeological textile studies. The thesis focuses on a series of case studies from Danebury and the Environs projects which were examined to determine what new information could be gleaned from textile tools and their deposition. Previous scholarship has traditionally discussed stylistic typologies of loomweights, spindle whorls, and long-handled combs (e.g., Hedges, 1973; DeRoche, 1995; Tuohy, 1995a), some more in-depth than others, however, this approach has largely overlooked an analysis of their utilitarian function. The thesis overhauls the technical function of tools, firstly to avoid perpetuating their often-mistaken assumed functions (particularly combs); and secondly to create a unified schema of textile technology from this period. This allows for a more nuanced understanding of the 'chaîne opératoire'. Additionally, it provides the basis for analysing the production capabilities of Iron Age people through a comprehensive analysis of the textile tools. Further to this point, depositional contexts were also investigated. Previous considerations of textile tools usually interpreted their placement as either indicative of production or rubbish, resulting in a one-to-one correlation that reflected Iron Age production. Unfortunately, this correlation disregards the possibility that textiles tools were sometimes selected for special depositional procedures. When deposition is considered as part of the production sequence, or removal from production, tools are recognized as having been transformed at these moments and can be analysed within a greater social context.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF