Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags

Årgang

Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags - 01.01.1962, Side 65

Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags - 01.01.1962, Side 65
FORN RÖGGVARVEFNAÐUR 71 Irish word then derived from the Icelandic vararfeldir -which could just as well have been an article of trade in Ireland as in Saxony. In mediaeval art, renderings of shaggy garments were found most often in pictures of St. John the Baptist (Fig. 11); a number of such pictures dating from the lOth through the 12th c. were found (Figs. 15, 16). Pictures of secular persons wearing shaggy mantles were more rarely seen (Fig. 17). It was interesting to compare these pictures with the descriptions of the Icelandic feldir and note the many parallels. Only on the Bayeux tapestry was seen an apparently shaggy textile used as a rug or coverlet during this period (Fig. 19). Shaggy pile woven fabrics after 1200. References were found to shaggy cloaks, tunics and coverlets from various places in Europe after 1200. French, English and German pictorial sources showed St. John the Baptist wearing a shaggy cloak or tunic (or both) at least until the 14th c. (Figs. 20, 21, 22). Also from the 13th into the 17th c. pilgrims, hermits and others were depicted wearing shaggy garments in English, Irish, German and Italian sources. Little information was found on the origin and use in Europe of shaggy coverlets for bedding; in Scandinavia where they were still being produced in the 19th and 20th c. they werc first mentioned in written sources in the first half of the 15th c. and then called rya. Sources on the use of shaggy cloaks, coats and coverlets apparently based on old tradilion were found from various places in southern and eastern Europe from the 18th, 19th and 20th c. Conclusion. Pile fabrics of a fleecy, shaggy appearance similar to that of the Heynes fragments were indicated among the earliest known pile fabrics in the world. The pile knot used in the Heynes fragments was found to be most closely related to the Spanish knot, although no knot completely identical to that from Heynes was found. Shaggy garments and textiles were found used through ancient and mediaeval times somewhere or other in the area of south west Asia, north Africa and Europe. Although pile woven mantles were one of the main exports of Iceland from the lOth through the 12th c. evidence indicated that the Frisians and the Irish as well traded in shaggy textiles, the Frisians perhaps at a some- what earlier date, the Irish possibly at an earlier and, mainly, a later date but perhaps also contemporaneously with the Icelanders. The specific origin of tlie Icelandic shaggy pile weaving technique has not been determined. It would seem most natural if the Norwegian settlers of Iceland had brought with them the knowledge of the teclinique. Another possibility would seem to be that it had been brought to Ice- land with settlers or slaves from the British Isles. Still, as long as examples of it are found nowhere else it seems that the pile knot of the Heynes textiles might be considered a special Icelandic technique.
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Árbók Hins íslenzka fornleifafélags

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