The grave from Gokstad in Norway, dating to ca 900 AD, is one of the best-preserved Viking Age ship graves in the world. The grave mound contained a variety of goods along with human remains, buried in a Viking ship. Several textiles, including embroideries and shreds of what might have been the ship’s tent, were also found. The colors of the textile fragments are now severely faded, but the high quality of the embroidery made of gold and silk threads is still apparent. The style of the embroidery is exceptional, having no equivalents in other Scandinavian graves. The analyses by HPLC coupled with both diode array and mass spectrometric detectors revealed that the striped “tent” cloth as well as the silk thread used for the embroidery were ...
Two textile remains from the Roman Iron Age Two Jutish graves from the Roman Iron Age contained sma...
rchaeological textiles recovered on two occasions from the Huldremose bog, Denmark, represent some o...
Textiles from Rådved Three fragments of textiles we...
The grave from Gokstad in Norway, dating to ca 900 AD, is one of the best-preserved Viking Age ship ...
The Textiles from Nørre Vosborg In a north Jutland woman's grave from the Viking Age a few textile r...
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...
A large systematic dye investigation of prehistoric Danish and Norwegian bog textiles was carried ou...
Organic colorants of textiles found in the female burial of Lieto Ristinpelto, SW Finland, were anal...
Archaeological textiles excavated from Dutch soils usually have a brown appearance. Three sets of wo...
This thesis concerns the role and use of archaeological textiles (AT) deposited in inhumation and cr...
approximately 1100 graves in the vast grave-fields lying outside the walls of this town. Stolpe&apos...
Nowadays most plant textiles used for clothing and household are made of cotton and viscose. Before ...
The 17th-19th-century burial materials from northern Ostrobothnia are studied in order to consider t...
Over many years, illustrator Miranda Bødtker (1896–1996) carried out drawings for botanists, zoologi...
Two textile remains from the Roman Iron Age Two Jutish graves from the Roman Iron Age contained sma...
rchaeological textiles recovered on two occasions from the Huldremose bog, Denmark, represent some o...
Textiles from Rådved Three fragments of textiles we...
The grave from Gokstad in Norway, dating to ca 900 AD, is one of the best-preserved Viking Age ship ...
The Textiles from Nørre Vosborg In a north Jutland woman's grave from the Viking Age a few textile r...
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...
A large systematic dye investigation of prehistoric Danish and Norwegian bog textiles was carried ou...
Organic colorants of textiles found in the female burial of Lieto Ristinpelto, SW Finland, were anal...
Archaeological textiles excavated from Dutch soils usually have a brown appearance. Three sets of wo...
This thesis concerns the role and use of archaeological textiles (AT) deposited in inhumation and cr...
approximately 1100 graves in the vast grave-fields lying outside the walls of this town. Stolpe&apos...
Nowadays most plant textiles used for clothing and household are made of cotton and viscose. Before ...
The 17th-19th-century burial materials from northern Ostrobothnia are studied in order to consider t...
Over many years, illustrator Miranda Bødtker (1896–1996) carried out drawings for botanists, zoologi...
Two textile remains from the Roman Iron Age Two Jutish graves from the Roman Iron Age contained sma...
rchaeological textiles recovered on two occasions from the Huldremose bog, Denmark, represent some o...
Textiles from Rådved Three fragments of textiles we...