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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Irene Good —<br />

a category for cloth to be used as wrapping for the transport of other goods (Veenhof<br />

1972).<br />

CONCLUSION<br />

Future archaeological investigations will continue to add new textile evidence for<br />

<strong>Babylonian</strong> textile technique, through careful and refined recovery of textile fragments,<br />

and careful study of ceramic and plaster impressions and other types of direct<br />

archaeological textile evidence. Indeed, the excavations at Ur in the 1920s and 1930s<br />

produced an abundance of perishable remains. Though the region that was Mesopotamia<br />

has reputedly very poor preservation conditions for this type of material, with care<br />

and a bit of good fortune, indeed, there does come important evidence of this kind<br />

to light, as evidenced at Ur, and in the north at Abu Salabikh (Figure 9.6). 2 In Iran<br />

textiles have been recovered from sites in the Solduz Valley and in Kirman, and<br />

further east in the desert sands of Seistan. When we don’t think they will be there,<br />

we don’t see them when they are there.<br />

Cloth and textiles are central to society and, therefore, their archaeological remnants<br />

should be sought and recognized for their informational value. Although the recovery<br />

of clothing in archaeological contexts is rare, it does occur. When well preserved and<br />

from good context, archaeological textiles hold a rich store of information on a wide<br />

array of topics.<br />

Figure 9.6 Close-up of textile pseudomorph from Abu Salabikh<br />

(photo: courtesy of J.N. Postgate)<br />

152

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