Willem
Wednesday, 26 October 2016 07:53

Valsgärde Embroideries

Valsgärde is the name of a farm just north of Gammla Uppsala, the ancient centre of the Swedish kings. The place is famous for its burial site, with graves dating from the sixth (the earliest ship burial) until the eleventh centuries. The site was excavated between 1928 and 1952, and its finds have been compared to other ship burials, including that of Sutton Hoo.

Wednesday, 26 October 2016 07:52

Jorvik Embroidery (York, England)

Excavations into Viking-period levels at York, northern England, yielded only one example of embroidery. It was found on a small bag that dates to the late tenth or early eleventh century. The bag has an outercover of red silk samite, perhaps imported from Byzantium. It is decorated with a crude silk cross, in what appears to be chain stitch or stem stitch.

Wednesday, 26 October 2016 07:49

Birka Embroideries (Sweden)

Birka is an archaeological site in Sweden, located on the island of Bjørkø, some 30 km west of Stockholm. It was an important maritime centre during the Viking age. It has been an UNESCO World Heritage site since 1993.

Wednesday, 26 October 2016 07:45

Oseberg Ship Burial (Norway)

The Oseberg ship burial is located near Tønsberg in the district of Vestfold, Norway. It was excavated in 1904-1905. The burial has been dated to AD 834. The excavated ship and many of the burial goods are on display in the Viking Ship Museum at Bygdøy just west of Oslo.

Wednesday, 26 October 2016 07:35

Viking Embroidery

Embroidery seems to be a relatively late development in Scandinavia. Textiles were generally adorned by other means, as for instance using different types of fibres for the fabric (wool/linen). 'Real' embroidery is known from the ninth century onwards.

Tuesday, 25 October 2016 19:16

Mammen Embroideries

The Mammen embroideries were discovered in 1868 at the mound of Bjerringhøj, near the village of Mammen, near Viborg, Denmark. The site has become particularly famous for the discovery of the so-called 'Mammen axe'.The embroideries and other finds were discovered in a chamber-grave of a man who was buried in the winter of AD 970-971.

The National Museum Twenthe (The Netherlands) houses a late sixteenth century antependium that is embroidered with representations of the Throne of Mercy (or Throne of Grace) and the symbols of the four evangelists. The antependium is a good example of traditional Icelandic embroidery.

Tuesday, 25 October 2016 17:02

Antependium with Three Bishops (Iceland)

The National Museum of Iceland in Reykjavik houses an antependium that dates to the fifteenth or sixteenth centuries. It is embroidered with laidwork and couching (locally known as refilsaumur). The ground material is linen, most of the embroidery threads are of wool; some gilt thread was used to outline certain outlines. Almost all of the antependdium is covered with embroidery.

Tuesday, 25 October 2016 16:07

Bed Cover (Iceland)

The Victoria and Albert Museum in London houses a bed cover from Iceland, dating to c. 1700. Its purchase was recommended by William Morris, the nineteenth century British supporter and promotor of the Arts and Crafts Movement. He regarded this cover as a reflection of Byzantine art (although perhaps more reminiscent of Sassanian art from Iran). The cover was made by the embroideress, Thorbjorg Magusdottir (1667 - 1737). 

Sunday, 23 October 2016 18:29

Paçalık

In the Ottoman world, the paçalık was the name of the embroidered dress worn by the bride the day after her wedding. It was also the name for a piece of embroidered cloth (always worked in a pair), sewn onto the legs of a woman's underpants.

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