TELA
TELA (
ἱστός), a loom. The
elementary principle of weaving being merely the crossing of threads over
and under, it is probable that it first took the form of simple plaiting
(Lucret. 5.1349; cf. the term
ἔμπλεξις τοῦ
στήμονος, Plat.
Polit. p. 282
E); but we have no record of a time when the real loom in some form or other
was unknown to the Greeks and Romans. Its construction in many points is
clear, but there are also several questions which cannot be answered with
certainty, and about which we must be content with conjectures. Even now the
dispute whether writers of the Augustan age are speaking of the upright or
the horizontal loom cannot be said to be ended.
From plaiting comes naturally the idea of stretching fixed threads and
working a cross thread alternately over and under: for everything
[p. 2.765]woven consists of two parts, the fixed thread or
warp (
stamen,
στήμων), and the woof or weft (
subtemen, later
trana,1
κροκή). Instead of
κροκὴ we sometimes find
ἐφυφὴ used (Plat.
Legg. v. p. 734 E), and in
this passage, as well as in Plat.
Polit. p. 283
E, we find noticed one of the most important differences between the warp
and the weft; viz. that the threads of the former are strong and firm in
consequence of being more twisted in spinning, while those of the latter are
comparatively soft and yielding. This is in fact the difference which in
modern silk manufacture distinguishes
organzine from
tram, and in cotton manufacture
twist from
weft. Another
name for the weft or tram was
ῥοδάνη
(
Batr. 181; Eustath.
ad Il. 23.762;
Od. 5.121).
It may facilitate reference to arrange the parts of the loom under different
heads, noting the terms discussed in each:--I. Words connected with the
arrangement of the
stamen (
στήμων, warp); viz. the framework,
jugum, insubuli, scapi,
κελέοντες;
ordiri,
διάζομαι, καῖρος:
pondera
ἀγνῦθες, λεῖαι: II. Those connected with
the
licia or
μίτοι ( “shedding” by leashes or heddles); viz.
arundo, liciatorium, perhaps
insilia (
κανών,
perhaps
ἀντίον =
“heddle-leaf” ): III. With the radius (
κερκίς, shuttle); viz.
πήνη,
panus (bobbin or spool),
subtemen, trama (
κροκή,
weft, woof or tram): IV. With the
spatha, and
the later
pecten (
σπάθη and
κτείς = reed, lay,
batten): V. The question of upright and horizontal looms: VI. Style and
pattern.
I. The threads of the warp were called
stamina,
στήμονες, because they were, at any rate
originally, fixed at certain intervals in a row,
upright, i.e. perpendicularly from the top to the bottom of the loom
(Varr.
L. L. 5.113). For the same reason the very first
operation in weaving was to set up the loom,
ἱστὸν
στήσασθαι (
Hom. Od. 2.94; Hes.
Op. 779); and the web or cloth, before it was cut down or
“descended” from the loom (
κατέβα
ἀφ̓ ἱστῶ, Theoc. 15.35), was called “vestis
pendens” or “pendula tela” (
Ov.
Met. 4.395;
Ep. 1.10), because it hung down from
the transverse beam, which was probably the
jugum, our “yarnbeam.” This transverse beam with the
two upright side-posts (
ἱστοπόδες or
κελέοντες, Theoc. 17.34) formed the
whole framework (
ἱστὸς or
tela) of the primitive loom. Blümner indeed
denies that jugum had this meaning, on the ground that Ovid (
Ov. Met. 6.55) uses it in speaking of what he
believes to be the horizontal loom. But (1) from analogy of the other senses
of the word [see
JUGUM], the only
natural view is, that in the loom it means the
bar connecting the uprights (Ahrens well compares the jugum under which the
vanquished passed): (2) this explains the
jugum
of the lyre, which we may suppose to have been named from a resemblance to
the loom, the strings stretched from the jugum being compared to the threads
of the warp: (3) even if Blümner's theory were right as to the
horizontal loom--(for arguments against it, see under V.)--the jugum might
still be the cross-bar joining the side-pieces, on which the warp-threads
(here called collectively “tela” ) are bound: and (4) the name
of
tela jugalis (
Cat.
Agr. 10,
14) is then easily
explained as being the primitive loom, in which the warp was fastened
directly to the jugum, with no second cross-bar or “yarn-beam”
underneath, as in the woodcut below. The doubtful words to be noticed in the
structure of the loom are
insubuli and
scapi. The former is explained by Blümner
as =
κανόνες: the words of Isidore, however
(
Or. 19.29), “insubuli quia infra supra
sunt,” seem rather to indicate that the yarnbeam and cloth-beam were
together known by this name. In the earliest and simplest frame, as will be
shown, where the web was not longer than the loom itself, the top-bar acted
as the yarn-beam, and there was no cloth-beam at all, but (as in the Chiusi
vase, and in the Icelandic loom represented in fig. 1) it was a useful
addition to have a second upper bar as yarn-beam, which might take the form
of a roller with a reserve of warp, and again, instead of the
καῖρος and weights at the bottom of the loom, to
have a beam on which the cloth could be rolled as it was made.
Scapi, according to Blümner, also =
κανόνες, as in the gloss “scapi,
κανονες γερδιακοί:” Rich and
Monro (
ad Lucret. 5.1361) translate it
“yarn-beam:” the use of scapus in
Plin. Nat. 13.77 for the roll of a book
would rather suggest the cloth-beam as its part in the loom; but on the
whole, if we reason from the ordinary sense of scapus, we may best suppose
the scapi of the loom to be the
side-posts =
κελέοντες, for which a Latin name is
wanted: the epithet “sonans” may refer to the rattling of the
loom generally.
The fastening of the warp to the top-bar or
jugum was called specially
διάζεσθαι,
στημονίζεσθαι, and in Latin
ordiri,
exordiri (Plaut.
Pseud. 1.4, 6;
Bacch. 2.3, 116; cf.
Cic.
de Or. 2.3. 3, 145): the handing of the
threads for this process, when two persons were setting up the loom, is
προφορεῖσθαι, which involved some
running backwards and forwards, which is the meaning of the word in
Aristoph. Birds 4 (Schol.
ad loc.;
Hesych. sub voce the rendering in L. and S. is
at variance with these authorities). The process is well illustrated by
Nonnus (
Dion. 6.150):--
καὶ ποσὶ φοιταλέοισι παλίνδρομος ἀκρὸν ἀπ̓ ἀκροῦ
πρωτοπαγῆ ποίησε διάσματα, φάρεος ἀρχήν,
ἱστῷ δ᾽ ἀμφὶς ἕλισσεν.
This moving backwards and forwards (
ἱστὸν
ἐποίχεσθαι,
Od. 10.222) belonged to the old fashion of
standing to weave, before the fashion of sitting and beginning the web at
the bottom of the loom was introduced from Egypt. Nonnus describes it in
Epic manner, though the loom at which the worker
sat no doubt prevailed in his
[p. 2.766]time. In
setting the warp for lighter fabrics the threads were stretched fewer and
further apart, and the web was then
ἀραιόστημος or
μανόστημος, as
opposed to the thicker and coarser (
στημόνιον,
πολύστημος or
πυκνόστημος.
But the warmth required in winter was secured by driving the softer weft
threads closer,
στημόνι δ᾽ ἐν παύρῳ πολλὴν κρόκα
μηρύσασθαι (Hes.
Op. 538).
It may be supposed that the threads of the warp would easily fall out of
place and become entangled unless they were secured at both ends: this in
more modern looms is effected by the “yarn-roll” or
“yarn-beam” at one end, and the “cloth-roll”
at the other. In the older Greek and Roman looms the warp was fastened to
the
jugum at the top, and the lower end of each
warp-thread was passed through a loop (
καῖρος), and also had a weight attached to it to make it hang
straight. This lower row of loops (
καῖροι,
καίρωμα) must (as Blümner rightly shows,
Techn. 1.126) be distinguished from the
μίτοι or
licia with which they
are sometimes confused. This is clear from the explanation in
Etym.
Mag. and Eustath.
ad Od. 7.107,
παρὰ τὸν μίτον [i. e. parallel to, but below,
the
μίτοι]
ὑπὲρ
τοῦ μὴ συγχεῖσθαι τοὺς στήμονας. Hence it is probable
that the Homeric adjective
καιροσέων is a
mere synonym for
ὑφασμένων. The weights
attached to the end of each warp-thread were called
ἀγνῦθες or
λεῖαι (Poll.
7.36), in Latin merely
pondera (Sen.
Ep. 90, 20): they were either simple stones with a hole bored
through them, or made of pottery: a great number of these have been found:
Blümner refers to Ritschl,
Uebcr antike
Gewichtsteine, Bonn, 1866; see also the account of those found at
Hissarlik (Schliemann,
Troja, p. 163); it is
possible that many of the terra-cotta “whorls” which he thinks
intended for spindles may have been weights for weaving (ib. p. 41). In the
Scandinavian ode translated by Gray as
The Fatal Sisters, the
weights are warriors' skulls. Perhaps the expression there, “the
weights that
play below,” may explain the
λίθον ὀρχηστῆρα of Nonn.
Dion. 24.254.
Whilst the improvements in machinery have to a great extent superseded the
use of the upright loom in all other parts of Europe, it remains almost in
its primitive state in Iceland. The following woodcut is reduced from an
engraving of the Icelandic loom in Olaf Olafsen's
Economic
Tour in that island, published in Danish at Copenhagen, A.D. 1780,
which will probably illustrate the earlier Greek and Roman loom better than
any of the few representations on ancient vases which have been discovered.
(For the best of these, Penelope's loom, on a vase from Clusium, see
Baumeister,
Denkm. fig. 2332.) We observe underneath the
jugum a roller which is turned by a handle, and on which the web is wound as
the work advances. The threads of the warp are divided into thirty or forty
parcels, to each of which a stone is suspended for the purpose of keeping
the warp in a perpendicular position and allowing the necessary play to the
strokes of the spatha, which is drawn at the side of the loom: they
correspond to the
καῖρος or
καίρωμα described above. These knotted bundles
of threads to which the stones were attached often remained after the web
was finished, in the form of a fringe. [FIMBRIA.]
In the centre of the web we see the attachment of the threads of the warp by
means of leashes
 |
Fig. 1. Icelandic loom.
|
to three rods (
κανόνες,
liciatoria). This important and intricate part of
the loom needs some explanation.
II. In the most primitive method of weaving it is probable that the passage
for the weft was opened merely by a transverse rod (
arundo,
κανὼν) passed through the warp, separating
the threads so that they were alternately on either side of the arundo. This
seems to be shown in Circe's loom (fig. 4), for we can hardly think Ahrens
(
Philog. xxxv. p. 391) right in taking it to be Circe's
magic wand. Such a method of course only admits of plain weaving without a
pattern, and moreover the shifting of the arundo would be slow and tedious:
in order that the weft might be taken backwards and forwards across the warp
passing over or under as might be required, it would be necessary
laboriously to raise or depress each thread separately, as in plaiting,
unless the improved plan, which was already in use in the Homeric age, of
“decussating,” or as it is now called
“shedding,” the warp by leashes (
μίτοι,
licia) had been invented. By a leash, or as
weavers term it “a heddle,” we are to understand a thread
having at one end a loop, through which a thread of the warp was passed, the
other end being fastened to a straight rod (
κανών,
arundo; later
liciatorium). Thus, supposing that only plain weaving without a
pattern is required, so that the weft is merely to pass over and under
alternately, and we number the warp-threads 1, 2, 3, 4, &c., all the
leashes holding the threads of uneven numbers 1, 3, &c. are tied to
one rod or
liciatorium, while all those holding
the threads 2, 4, &c. are tied to another, and by simply moving one
rod forward and the other back a free passage is opened for the weft to
shoot through. But here, though there might be a coloured stripe by changing
at regular intervals the colour of the thread in the weft, or other
variations by colouring different threads of the
[p. 2.767]warp (see below), there could be no elaborate colour pattern and no
pattern at all of the
texture. This was produced,
just as it is now, by a contrivance for passing over at requisite places a
number of warp-threads together, so that the weft might pass under one and
over two or under one and over three, and so on. Since it is obvious that it
must not be the same single threads that are raised (or, in the upright
loom, brought forward) and the same two or more that are depressed
(otherwise there would be no weaving at all), it is necessary that there
should be an additional set of leashes or “heddles” for every
increase of variation, so as to vary the threads which are raised or
depressed. When there was one additional set, the weaving was called
bilix,
δίμιτος, of which the Icelandic loom in the
woodcut above gives an example: with two additional sets it was
trilix, and then could pass under one and over
three: for great complexity of pattern a great many sets of leashes were
used (see further below). The details of this part of the subject can be
studied in modern weaving. The
principle of varying
the pattern was really exactly the same as in the loom of to-day: the only
difference lies in the mechanical contrivances which make the work vastly
more rapid. In the earliest times not only the shuttle, but the
liciatoria,
κανόνες, or leash-rods (
“heddle-leaves” ), were worked by the hand. This is
signified by Homer:
ἐπὶ δ᾽ ὤρνυτο δῖος
Ὀδύσσευς
ἄγχι μάλ̓ ὡς ὅτε τίς τε γυναικὸς ἐϋζώνοιο
τανίον ἐξέλκουσα παρὲκ μίτον, ἀγχόθί δ᾽
ἴσχει
στήθεος.--(
Il.
23.760, imitated by Nonn.
Dion.
6.152, 631.)
Here, as rightly explained by Blümner and Marquardt, Odysseus is
near to Ajax, as the
κανὼν or leash-rod is
to the breast of the weaver, when she brings it forward with one hand
(
ἀγχόθι ἴσχει στήθεος), in order
with the other hand to draw the weft through the “shed,” or, as
it is expressed, “behind the leashes,” i. e. behind the warp
held in the leashes (
παρὲκ μίτον). Heyne
and others, who make the
κανὼν the shuttle,
not only give the word a wrong meaning, but miss the point, since at the
upright loom part of the warp must always be between the shuttle and the
weaver, and it is only the
κανὼν which
would be moved nearer the body. It is possible, perhaps probable, that the
Greeks and Romans of later times used treadles for moving the
liciatoria, but we have no direct evidence of it,
nor any word to express it: as, however, they worked many machines with the
feet, it is unlikely that they omitted to do so in weaving. Some indeed
explain
INSILIA in Lucret.
5.1352 as
treadles, but we believe it to be more
correctly understood as=
liciatorium (see Munro
ad loc.). The Icelandic loom, like the Homeric,
has no treadle, and hence we see two rods at the side which can give some
help to the single weaver by fixing the leash-rod, as required, while he
works the shuttle; but this is clearly a slower process than using the feet
to release the hands. The
ἀντίον (
Aristoph. Thes. 822) Blümner
explains as a special name of one of the
κανόνες (cf. Poll. 7.36).
III. We have described the comparatively coarse, strong and much-twisted
threads designed for the
warp arranged in parallel
lines, and the leashes ready to “shed” them: we have now to
speak of the shuttle which conveyed the
weft or
woof across. This implement was called
κερκὶς in Greek and
radius in Latin (Hor.
Od. 5.62;
Plat.
Polit. p. 281 E,
Cratyl.
p. 388 C;
Ov. Met. 4.275, compared with
Horn.
Il. 22.448): it is imagined of gold
in Homer (
l.c.), but was usually of wood (Plat.
Cratyl. p. 389;
Ov. Met.
6.132): the end pointed (
Soph. Ant.
976;
Ov. Met. 6.56): the humming sound
of its passage is expressed by
Aristoph.
Frogs 1315. The
κερκὶς or
radius was strictly, like our shuttle, the
receptacle for the “bobbin” (
πήνη
πηνίον,
panus, panuvellium) on which the weft was wound
(
Hom. Il. 23.762;
Eur. Hec. 470;
Anth. Pal. 6.288;
Varr.
L. L. 5.114; Isid.
Or. 19.29). The
annexed woodcut shows the form in which
 |
Fig. 2. The shuttle.
|
it is still used in some retired parts of our island for common
domestic purposes, and which may be regarded as a form of great antiquity.
An oblong cavity is seen in its upper surface, which holds the bobbin. A
small stick, like a wire, extends through the length of this cavity, and
enters its two extremities so as to turn freely. The small stick passes
through a hollow cane, which our manufacturers call a
quill, and which is surrounded by the woof. This is drawn through
a round hole in the front of the shuttle, and, whenever the shuttle is
thrown, the bobbin revolves and delivers the woof through this hole. The
ancient “shuttles” in the Mayence Museum (Blümner, p.
146) are probably, though not certainly, rightly so named. They are
pen-shaped and would have to be turned round for the return passage, only
one end being pointed. The process of winding the yarn so as to make it into
a bobbin or pen was called
πηνίζεσθαι
(Theoc. 18.32), or
ἀναπηνίζεσθαι (Aristot.
H. A. 5.19). The reverse process by which it was
delivered through the hole in front of the shuttle (see the last woodcut)
was called
ἐκπηνίζεσθαι. Hence the phrase
ἐκπηνιεῖται ταῦτα means “he
shall disgorge these things” (
Aristoph. Frogs 586; Schol.
in loc.).
IV. Supposing the warp to have been thus adjusted, and the pen or the
shuttle to have been carried through it, it was then decussated or
“shedded” by drawing forwards the proper rod, so as to
carry one set of the threads of the warp across the rest, after which the
weft was shot back again (the shuttle being thrown by the hand, as was the
case even down to 1738), and by the continual repetition of this process the
warp and woof were interlaced; and in “fancy” weaving, with
several sets of leashes, the pattern was produced. It was necessary further
to close up the weft threads. It has been said above that, after the weft
had been conveyed by the shuttle through the warp, it was driven originally
in Rome and Greece upwards, as is represented in the first woodcut, but
afterwards, according to the prevalent
[p. 2.768]fashion in
Egypt, downwards, as in the second (Isid.
Orig. 19.22;
Hdt. 2.35). Two different instruments were used in
this part of the process. The simplest and most ancient was in the form of a
large wooden sword (
spatha,
σπάθη,
dim.
σπάθιον, Plato,
Lysis, p. 208; Aesch.
Choeph. 226). From the verb
σπαθάω, to beat with the spatha, cloth
rendered close and compact by this process was called
σπαθητός (
Athen. 12.
525 d): when the weft is not driven close, as in light,
transparent fabrics, it is called
λεπτοσπάθητος (Soph.
Fr. 400): the close texture
πολυσπαθής (
Anth. Pal.
6.39). This instrument is still used in Iceland exactly as it was in ancient
times, and a figure of it, copied from Olafsen, is given in the first
woodcut.
The spatha was, however, superseded by the comb (
pecten,
κτείς), the teeth of which were inserted
between the threads of the warp, and thus made by a forcible impulse to
drive the threads of the woof close together. (Ovid,
Ov. Fast. 3.820,
Met. 6.58;
Juv. 9.26;
Verg. A.
7.14; Nonn.
Dion. 24.253; Poll.
7.35.) As to its form, we are told only that it was an implement with teeth.
Blümner doubts if the example from an Egyptian tomb figured by Rich
is a pecten, but we think that the correctness of Rich in this point is
established by the very similar pecten of which we give an illustration. It
is the comb now used in parts of Asia Minor in the loom shown below (fig.
6), which we believe to resemble closely the later form of the Greek and
Roman loom. As a late introduction, instead of the
σπάθη, it is mentioned only in late Greek writers: it
originated in Egypt, whence it is called
Niliacus in
Mart. 14.150 (cf. Verg.
Cir. 179).
2 Among us the office of the comb is executed with greater ease and
effect by the
reed, lay, or
batten.
 |
Fig. 3. Weaving comb used in Asia Minor. (Benndorff.)
|
The lyre [
LYRA], the favourite
musical instrument of the Greeks, was only known to the Romans as a foreign
invention. Hence they appear to have described its parts by a comparison
with the loom, with which they were familiar. The terms
jugum and
stamina (
Ov. Met. 11.169) were transferred by an
obvious resemblance from the latter to the former object; and, although they
adopted into their own language the Greek word
plectrum (Ovid,
Ov. Met.
11.167-
170), they used the Latin
PECTEN to denote the same
thing, not because the instrument used in striking the lyre was at all like
a comb in shape and appearance, but because it was held in the right hand
and inserted between the strings of the lyre as the comb was between the
stamina of the loom (
Verg. A. 6.647; Pers.
6.2).
V.
The two kinds of upright looms and the supposed horizontal
loom.--At some time or other a more convenient form of loom was
introduced into Europe, in which the web was worked in a flat horizontal
frame instead of hanging vertically in front of the weaver. The parts of
this loom are the same in nature and object as those described above, except
that, as the warp frame lies flat, the leashes or heddles must be worked
vertically up and down instead of backwards and forwards; and if the Romans
used such a loom, the
licia and
liciatorium depended from a cross-beam raised above
the flat
tela. But when this change came, and
even whether it belongs to anything earlier than mediaeval times, is a
matter of doubt. The view of Blümner and Marquardt is that in the
Augustan age the horizontal loom had already superseded in ordinary use the
upright loom. We are led to conclude, though with diffidence in opposing
such authorities, that the evidence is not only too slight to warrant such
an assertion, but that it points the other way: we go far beyond Rich in
this view, and hold, with Ahrens, that the horizontal loom does not belong
to ancient Greece and Rome at all, and was probably introduced into Europe
by the Arabs.
First, as to the passages which speak definitely of a change in looms:
Artemidorus speaks of two kinds of looms, the
ἱστὸς
ὄρθιος, at which the weaver is said
περιπατεῖν, and the
ἕτερος
ἱστός at which she sits (
Oneirocr. 3.36).
Similarly,
standing to weave is called
“oldfashioned” by Festus, pp. 277, 8; 288, 33;
Serv. ad Aen. 7.14;
Hesych. sub voce
ἐποιχόμενοι; Isid.
Orig.
19.22. But sitting does not imply the horizontal loom: it merely
distinguishes the “Egyptian” fashion of beginning the cloth at
the bottom of the loom, as will be seen below. Nor can any argument be drawn
from the implements used. Blümner (as was said before) believes
jugum to be only the beam for hanging
licia above the horizontal loom, and
therefore assumes that all looms, in which a jugum is mentioned, are
horizontal: but we cannot accept his view about the meaning of jugum as
proved or even likely: if it were, Ovid's “tela jugo vincta
est” (see above) must refer to binding the licia on to this beam: but
to use
tela for
licia would be strange, when we compare “addere licia
telae.” Then again it is said that the mention of
pecten implies the horizontal loom because Hesychius
says, s. v.
σπαθητόν, τὸ ὀρθὸν ὕφος σπάθῃ
κεκρουμένον οὐ κτενί: but this refers to the
tunica recta, or
regilla (see below), woven from the top downwards (the weft being
driven upwards) in the fashion of the time when the spatha only was used;
weaving from. the bottom upwards, front which it is distinguished, belonged
equally to the upright loom, and in the
Epithalamium
Laurentii et Mariae (
Poet. Lat. Min. 3.295,
Bahrens) the tela is
suspensa, but still the
pecten is used.
We may remark also that not only does no Greek or Latin writer mention any
difference of weaving beyond this upwards and downwards weaving and the
positions of sitting and standing,
[p. 2.769]but of the few
representations of weaving which are given in ancient art, none show
anything but the upright loom; and lastly, the following passage from
Theophylact, archbishop of Bulgaria A.D. 1070, shows that he knew nothing
but the two kinds of upright looms:
ἄλλοι δέ φασιν
ὅτι ἐν Παλαιστίνῃ ὑφαίνουσι τοὺς ἱστοὺς οὐχ ὡς παῤ ἡμῖν,
ὄντων ἄνω μὲν τῶν μίτων καὶ τοῦ στήμονος, κάτω δὲ
ὑφαινομένου τοῦ πανίου καὶ οὕτως ἀναβαίνοντος, ἀλλὰ
τοὐναντίον κάτω μέν εἰσιν οἱ μίτοι ἄνω δὲ ὑφαίνεται τὸ
ὕφασμα (
ad Joann. xviii. p. 825).
The changes in ancient Greek and Roman looms from the earliest to the latest
period of literature we believe to have been as follows. The earliest loom
(the Homeric loom and the
 |
Fig. 4.
|
early Roman loom, the
tela jugalis of
Cato) resembled the Icelandic loom (fig. 1) except that it was a simpler
framework without the yarnbeam, and so far like the representation of
Circe's loom taken from the Vatican Aeneid (fig. 4). But this representation
is an anachronism in making the web begin at the bottom. The author of this
ancient picture (whom it is of course absurd to make an authority as to the
Homeric loom) has in this point adhered to the fashion of his own day: but
in the simpler frame he has probably come near to the primitive pattern.
Homer's loom, however, had leashes, which are not given here, besides the
simple
κανών. The essential distinction
between the early Greek and Roman looms and the later was that pointed out
by Herodotus (
2.35), that the web began at the
top, and therefore the weaver always thrust the weft upwards (
ἄνω τὴν κροκὴν ὠθοῦσι) in striking it close
with the
σπάθη. The
tunica recta or
regilla,
enjoined with the conservatism of religion for the marriage garment, was
woven at this ancient loom ( “sursum versum,”
“in altitudinem,” Isid.
Orig. 19.22; Fest. p.
277, 8: the words
 |
Fig. 5. Loom from an Egyptian painting.
|
=the
ἄνω ὠθοῦσι of Herodotus):
it was woven also in one piece of the size of the loom frame, as there was
no rolling up of the cloth-beam or unrolling of the yarn-beam. At such a
loom also, as was said above, the weaver stood, and possibly, in the lack of
well-arranged leashes and heddles, had to walk round the loom for the
adjustment of the warp threads.
At a later time, probably quite at the end of the Republic, the Egyptian
fashion (Herod.
l.c.), of beginning the web at the
bottom and so weaving in a sitting posture, was introduced. The cut (fig. 5)
of an Egyptian weaver from a wall-painting (Wilkinson,
Ancient
Egyptians, vol. 2.170) illustrates this kind of loom. We think
that Wilkinson is right in considering the painting, which Rich (s. v.
subtemen) gives as an instance of Egyptian
horizontal weaving, to be not weaving at all, but the plaiting of mats. An
even better illustration of the Egyptian loom as adopted by the later Romans
and Greeks is afforded by a sketch of the modern Lycian weaving (fig. 6),
which we have taken from Benndorff (
Reise). The weaver is
using the comb described on page 768
a;
 |
Fig. 6. Weaver in modern Lycia. (Benndorff.)
|
We have little doubt that this faithfully reproduces in its form the Roman
loom which is characterised as the later kind, though the arrangements of
leashes, &c., may often have been more elaborate: this pattern may
well have been introduced into Asia Minor at som date later than the time of
Herodotus, and have lingered there since. With this Egyptian form came in
the other improvements described in I. and IV., the substitution of the
pecten for the
spatha, and the discontinuance of the weights (
ἀμνῦθες, λεῖαι,
pondera). It is needless to say that the
changes were not made all at once all over the Roman Empire: the older form
no doubt lingered in many places, particularly in the more remote countries.
Hence the stone weights found in Germany and elsewhere may well belong to a
date when at Rome itself the later form of loom prevailed and weights were
no longer of any use. Rejecting, as we feel compelled to do, the idea of a
horizontal loom,
[p. 2.770]we believe that no further change
in the loom took place except the development of dexterity in its
manipulation.
VI. After enumerating those parts of the loom which were necessary to
produce even the plainest piece of cloth, it remains to describe the methods
of producing its varieties, and more especially of adding to its value by
making it either warmer and softer, or more rich and ornamental. If the
object was to produce a checked pattern (
scutulis
dividere,
Plin. Nat. 8.196;
Juv. 2.97), or to weave what we should call a Scotch plaid (and
it is worthy of notice that Pliny attributes this pattern to a Celtic
people), the threads of the warp were arranged alternately black and white,
or of different colours in a certain series according to the pattern which
was to be exhibited. On the other hand, a striped pattern (
ῥαβδωτός,
Diod. 5.30;
virgata sagula,
Verg. A. 8.660) was produced by using a warp
of one colour only, but changing at regular intervals the colour of the
weft. Of this kind of cloth the Roman
trabea
(
Verg. A. 7.188) was an example. [
TOGA] Checked and striped goods
were no doubt, in the first instance, produced by combining the natural
varieties of wool, white, black, brown, &c. [
PALLIUM]. The weft also was the
medium through which almost every other diversity of appearance and quality
was effected. The warp as mentioned above was generally more twisted, and
consequently stronger and firmer than the weft: and with a view to the same
object different kinds of wool were spun for the warp and for the weft. The
consequence was, that after the piece was woven, the fuller drew out its nap
by carding, so as to make it like a soft blanket (Plato,
Polit. p. 302) [
FULLO]; and, as stated above, when the intention was to guard against
the cold, the warp was diminished and the weft or nap (
κρόξ, κρόκυς) made more abundant in proportion (Hesiod,
Op. 537; Proclus
ad loc.). In
this manner they made the soft
χλαῖνα or
LAENA [
PALLIUM]. On the other hand a
weft of finely twisted thread (
ἤτριον)
produced a thin kind of cloth, which resembled our buntine ( “lacernae
nimia subteminum tenuitate perflabiles,” Amm. Marcell. 14.6).
Where any kind of cloth was enriched by the admixture of different
materials, the richer and more beautiful substance always formed part of the
weft. Thus the
vestis subserica, or
tramoserica, had the weft of silk [
SERICUM]. In other cases it was
of gold (
Verg. A. 3.483; Servius
in loc.)--the invention of Attalus, according to
Plin. Nat. 8.196, and thence called
vestes Attalicae, but it was probably older
in the East and got its name because Attalus prized it; of wool dyed with
Tyrian purple (Ovid,
Ov. Met. 6.578;
Tyrio subtegmine,
Tib. 4.1,
122;
picto subtegmine,
V. Fl. 6.228); or of beavers'-wool (
vestis fibrina, Isid.
Orig. 19.22).
Hence the epithets
φοινικόνροκος,
“having a purple weft” (
Pind. O.
6.39),
ἀνθοκρόκος,
“producing a flowery weft” (
Eur. Hec.
470),
χρυσεοπηνήτος,
“made from bobbins or pens of gold thread” (
Eur. Orest. 841),
εὔπηνος,
“made with good bobbins” (Eurip.
Iph. in Taur.
1465),
κερκίδι ποικιλλοῦσα,
“variegating with the shuttle” (Eurip.
Iph. in
Taur. 223), &c.
But besides the variety of materials constituting the weft, an endless
diversity was effected by the manner of inserting them into the warp. The
terms
bilix and
δίμιτος, the origin of which has been explained, probably
denoted what we call
dimity or
twilled cloth, and the Germans
Zwillich, where by
missing over a certain number of warp-threads a ridged pattern is produced.
The poets apply
trilix, which in German has
become
Drillich, to a kind of armour, perhaps chain-mail, no
doubt resembling the pattern of cloth which was denoted by the same term
(
Verg. A. 3.467,
5.259,
7.639,
12.375; Val. Flaccus, 3.199) [
LORICA p. 81]. All kinds of
damask were produced by a very complicated apparatus of the same kind
(
plurimis liciis), and were therefore
called
Polymita (
Plin. Nat. 8.196;
Mart. 14.150),
for which
multicia (
Juv.
2.66) is probably, as Blümner thinks, an equivalent (cf.
Gloss. Philox. s. v.).
The sprigs or other ornaments produced in the texture at regular intervals
were called flowers (
ἄνθη, Philostr.
Imag. 2.28;
θρόνα,
Hom. Il. 22.440) or feathers (
plumae). Another term, adopted with reference to the
same machinery, was
ἐξάμιτον, denoting
velvet. In the Middle Ages it became
ξάμιτον, and thus produced the German
sammet, our
samite.
As far as we can form a judgment from the language and descriptions of
ancient authors, the productions of the loom appear to have fallen in
ancient times very little, if at all, below the beauty and variety of the
damasks, shawls, and tapestry of the present age. In addition to the notices
of particular works of this class, contained in the passages and articles
which have been already referred to, the following authors may be consulted
for accounts of some of the finest specimens of weaving: Euripid.
Ion, 190-202, 1141-1165; Aristot.
Mir.
Auscult. 96, = p. 838;
Athen.
12.541;
Verg. A. 5.250-
257,
Cir. 21-35; Ovid,
Ov. Met. 6.61-
128;
Stat. Theb. 6.64,
540-
547;
Auson.
Epiq. 26; Lamprid.
Heliog. 28;
Claudian, in
Stilich. 2.330-365.
Although weaving was amongst the Greeks and Romans a distinct trade carried
on by a separate class of persons (
ὑφάνται,
textores and
textrices,
linteones; cf. even in the Homeric age the
γυνὴ χερνῆτις,
Il. 12.433), who more particularly supplied
the inhabitants of the towns with the productions of their skill (Cato,
Cat. Agr. 135; Plat.
Phaed. p. 87 B,
Rep. ii. p. 370 D;
Paus. 7.21), yet every considerable domestic
establishment, especially in the country, contained a loom (Cato,
Cat. Agr. 10,
14),
together with the whole apparatus necessary for the working of wool
(
lanificium,
ταλασία, ταλασιουργία). (Hesiod,
Op. 779;
Verg. G. 1.285,
294.) [
CALATHUS] If in the more luxurious age the most
ornamental work was purchased, the slave household (
familia rustica) at least was thus clothed, and the commoner
stragula were made (
Dig.
33,
7,
12,
5; Paul.
Sent. 3, 6, 37). In Greece as
at Rome in earlier times the matron and her daughters, assisted by female
slaves, wove garments for husband, sons and brothers (Plat.
Legg. vii. p. 805 E; Aesch.
Cho. 231;
Eur. Ion 1417): so of the Roman matron weaving
in the
atrium,
Liv. 1.57; Ascon.
in
Milon. p. 43, and even in later times, Arnob. 2.67;
C. I.
L. 6.1527, 11602.
[p. 2.771]
When the farm or the palace was sufficiently large to admit of it, a portion
of it called the
ἱστῶν (
histones, Varro,
R. R. 1.2),
textrina or
textrinum, was
devoted to this purpose (
Cic. Ver. 4.26,
58,
59;
Isid.
Or. 14.8; cf. Hor.
Od.
2.18,
6). The work was there
principally carried on by female slaves (
quasillariae,
αἳ ἔριθοι, Theoc. 15.80;
Hom. Od. 7.235,
21.350;
C. I. L. 6.6639-6646) under the
superintendence of the mistress of the house, who herself also together with
her daughters took part in the labour, both by instructing beginners and by
finishing the more tasteful and ornamental parts (
Vitr.
6.7, p. 164; Symmachus,
Epist. 6.40). But although
weaving was employed in providing the ordinary articles of clothing among
the Greeks and Romans from the earliest times, yet as an inventive and
decorative art, subservient to luxury and refinement, it was almost entirely
Oriental. Persia, Babylonia, Egypt, Phoenicia, Phrygia, and Lydia, are all
celebrated for the wonderful skill and magnificence displayed in the
manufacture of scarfs, shawls, carpets, and tapestry. [CHLAMYS; PALLIUM; TAPES.]
For the weaving of sacred robes in Greek temples, see ARRHEPHORIA, HERAEA, PANATHENAEA; and cf.
Paus. 3.16,
2. (On the construction
of the loom, see also Blümner,
Technologie, i. pp.
120-157; Marquardt,
Privatleben, 519-527; Ahrens, in
Philolog. 35.385 ff.)
[
J.Y] [
G.E.M]