Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan)

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Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan). / Yvanez, Elsa Cécile Francine; Murillo, Mary-Lou; Francigny, Vincent; De Voogt, Alex.

In: Archaeological Textiles Review, Vol. 62, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Yvanez, ECF, Murillo, M-L, Francigny, V & De Voogt, A 2020, 'Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan)', Archaeological Textiles Review, vol. 62. <https://www.atnfriends.com/>

APA

Yvanez, E. C. F., Murillo, M-L., Francigny, V., & De Voogt, A. (2020). Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan). Archaeological Textiles Review, 62. https://www.atnfriends.com/

Vancouver

Yvanez ECF, Murillo M-L, Francigny V, De Voogt A. Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan). Archaeological Textiles Review. 2020;62.

Author

Yvanez, Elsa Cécile Francine ; Murillo, Mary-Lou ; Francigny, Vincent ; De Voogt, Alex. / Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan). In: Archaeological Textiles Review. 2020 ; Vol. 62.

Bibtex

@article{4ac03f671f8045b68f91f6ec07b2b2dc,
title = "Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan)",
abstract = "This article focusses on a loincloth found in situ on the skeleton on an Early Medieval male buried on the Nubian island of Sai, in Northern Sudan, dated to the 7th-9th centuries C.E. This loincloth differs from most of the contemporary textile production, as it was woven into shape in a triangular form and was probably using threads made of dromedary wool. Exhibiting several phases of repair and reuse until its internment with the deceased, this garment illustrates the textile know-hows and clothing practices of the ancient Nubians, as well as the cultural role of textiles during the funerary body rituals. ",
author = "Yvanez, {Elsa C{\'e}cile Francine} and Mary-Lou Murillo and Vincent Francigny and {De Voogt}, Alex",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
volume = "62",
journal = "Archaeological Textiles Newsletter",
issn = "0169-7331",
publisher = "Norwegian University of Science and Technology",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cultural interconnections of textile craft and burial practices in Early Medieval Sai (Sudan)

AU - Yvanez, Elsa Cécile Francine

AU - Murillo, Mary-Lou

AU - Francigny, Vincent

AU - De Voogt, Alex

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - This article focusses on a loincloth found in situ on the skeleton on an Early Medieval male buried on the Nubian island of Sai, in Northern Sudan, dated to the 7th-9th centuries C.E. This loincloth differs from most of the contemporary textile production, as it was woven into shape in a triangular form and was probably using threads made of dromedary wool. Exhibiting several phases of repair and reuse until its internment with the deceased, this garment illustrates the textile know-hows and clothing practices of the ancient Nubians, as well as the cultural role of textiles during the funerary body rituals.

AB - This article focusses on a loincloth found in situ on the skeleton on an Early Medieval male buried on the Nubian island of Sai, in Northern Sudan, dated to the 7th-9th centuries C.E. This loincloth differs from most of the contemporary textile production, as it was woven into shape in a triangular form and was probably using threads made of dromedary wool. Exhibiting several phases of repair and reuse until its internment with the deceased, this garment illustrates the textile know-hows and clothing practices of the ancient Nubians, as well as the cultural role of textiles during the funerary body rituals.

UR - http://chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.atnfriends.com/download/ATR_62_complete_for_homepage.pdf

M3 - Journal article

VL - 62

JO - Archaeological Textiles Newsletter

JF - Archaeological Textiles Newsletter

SN - 0169-7331

ER -

ID: 202812072