This paper is based on the undergraduate dissertation of Lindsey Stirling, which was supervised by Karen Milek, and which won the Society of Medieval Archaeology's John Hurst Memorial Dissertation Prize Acknowledgements This research would not have been possible without the assistance of Dr Martin Goldberg at the National Museum of Scotland, Lynda Aiano at Tankerness House Museum, Orkney, and Beverley Ballin Smith. The authors also wish to thank the two anonymous reviewers who provided valuable comments on earlier versions of this paper.Peer reviewedPostprin
In the collections of Uppsala university, cared for by the university Museum Gustavianum, is the col...
An unusually large amount of Bronze Age textiles have been preserved in southern Scandinavia. My res...
This body of work, comprising an exhibition, catalogue, website and education programme (252 events)...
THIS PAPER PRESENTS A new approach to Pictish and Viking culture contact in Orkney using the materia...
Cloth culture provides the framework to recognise the cultural significance of an assemblage of text...
Gender identity and women’s roles within the Viking Age (8th-11th CE) has long been a subject for in...
The initial aim of the present PhD thesis was to develop the method of classification for textile to...
This thesis explores the portable, non-indigenous material culture strongly related, but not exclusi...
Reading textiles from medieval Norse society supplements written sources and also provides insight i...
Textile research has demonstrated that new types of textiles were introduced to Scandinavia in the l...
Textile research has made significant advances in recent years as new technologies and methods are d...
Buchanan Courtney, Viking artefacts from southern Scotland and northern England: cultural contacts, ...
The Textiles from Nørre Vosborg In a north Jutland woman's grave from the Viking Age a few textile r...
Cartwright Ben Helmut John, Making the cloth that binds us : the role of spinning and weaving in cra...
This essay will treat the Gotlandic textile production during the Viking period (790 AD–1150 AD) by...
In the collections of Uppsala university, cared for by the university Museum Gustavianum, is the col...
An unusually large amount of Bronze Age textiles have been preserved in southern Scandinavia. My res...
This body of work, comprising an exhibition, catalogue, website and education programme (252 events)...
THIS PAPER PRESENTS A new approach to Pictish and Viking culture contact in Orkney using the materia...
Cloth culture provides the framework to recognise the cultural significance of an assemblage of text...
Gender identity and women’s roles within the Viking Age (8th-11th CE) has long been a subject for in...
The initial aim of the present PhD thesis was to develop the method of classification for textile to...
This thesis explores the portable, non-indigenous material culture strongly related, but not exclusi...
Reading textiles from medieval Norse society supplements written sources and also provides insight i...
Textile research has demonstrated that new types of textiles were introduced to Scandinavia in the l...
Textile research has made significant advances in recent years as new technologies and methods are d...
Buchanan Courtney, Viking artefacts from southern Scotland and northern England: cultural contacts, ...
The Textiles from Nørre Vosborg In a north Jutland woman's grave from the Viking Age a few textile r...
Cartwright Ben Helmut John, Making the cloth that binds us : the role of spinning and weaving in cra...
This essay will treat the Gotlandic textile production during the Viking period (790 AD–1150 AD) by...
In the collections of Uppsala university, cared for by the university Museum Gustavianum, is the col...
An unusually large amount of Bronze Age textiles have been preserved in southern Scandinavia. My res...
This body of work, comprising an exhibition, catalogue, website and education programme (252 events)...