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Sea silk

Sea silk is an extremely fine, rare, and valuable fabric that is made from the long silky filaments or byssus secreted by a gland in the foot of pen shells (in particular Pinna nobilis).[1] The byssus is used by the clam to attach itself to the sea bed.[2]

Knitted glove made of sea silk, from Taranto, Italy, probably from the late 19th century
Pinna nobilis shell and byssus
The extreme fineness of the byssus thread

Sea silk was produced in the Mediterranean region from the large marine bivalve mollusc Pinna nobilis until early in the 20th century. The animal, whose shell is sometimes almost a metre long, adheres itself pointed end down to rocks in the intertidal zone using a tuft of very strong thin fibres. These byssi or filaments (which can be six centimetres long) are spun and, when treated with lemon juice, turn a golden colour, which never fades.[3]

The cloth produced from these filaments can be woven even more finely than silk, and is extremely light and warm; it was said that a pair of women's gloves made from the fabric could fit into half a walnut shell and a pair of stockings in a snuffbox.[4][note 1] The cloth attracts clothes moths, the larvae of which will eat it.

Pinna nobilis is also sometimes gathered for its edible flesh and occasional pearls of fair quality.

History

Egypt

The Greek text of the (196 BC) Rosetta Stone records that Ptolemy V reduced taxes on priests, including one paid in byssus cloth. This is thought to be fine linen cloth,[5] not sea silk. In Ancient Egyptian burial customs, byssus was used to wrap mummies; this was also linen and not sea silk.

Greece

The sophist author Alciphron first records "sea wool" in his (c. 2nd century AD) "Galenus to Cryton" letter.[6]

Sea silk has been suggested as an interpretation of the nature of the golden fleece that was sought by Jason and the Argonauts[7] but scholars reject this hypothesis.[8]

Roman Empire

The early Christian Tertullian (c. 160–220 AD) mentions it when justifying his wearing a pallium instead of a toga.

Nor was it enough to comb and to sew the materials for a tunic. It was necessary also to fish for one's dress; for fleeces are obtained from the sea where shells of extraordinary size are furnished with tufts of mossy hair.[9]

Several sources mention lana pinna ("pinna wool"). Emperor Diocletian's (301 AD) Edict on Maximum Prices lists it as a valuable textile.[10]

The Byzantine historian Procopius's c. 550 AD Persian War, "stated that the five hereditary satraps (governors) of Armenia who received their insignia from the Roman Emperor were given chlamys (or cloaks) made from lana pinna. Apparently only the ruling classes were allowed to wear these chlamys."[11]

Arabia

The Arabic name for "sea silk" is ṣūf al-baḥr ("sea wool"). The 9th-century Persian geographer Estakhri notes that a sea-wool robe cost more than 1000 gold pieces and records its mythic source.

At a certain period of the year an animal is seen running out of the sea and rubbing itself against certain stones of the littoral, whereupon it deposes a kind of wool of silken hue and golden colour. This wool is very rare and highly esteemed, and nothing of it is allowed to waste.[12]

Two 13th-century authors, Ibn al-Baitar and Zakariya al-Qazwini, repeat this inaccurate "sea wool" story.

China

Beginning in the Eastern Han dynasty (25–220 AD), Chinese histories document importing sea silk. Chinese language names include "cloth from the west of the sea" and "mermaid silk".

The 3rd century AD Weilüe or "Brief Account of the Wei", which was an unofficial history of the Cao Wei empire (220–265 AD), records haixi ("West of the Sea") cloth made from shuiyang ("water sheep").[13]

They have fine brocaded cloth that is said to be made from the down of "water-sheep". It is called Haixi ("Egyptian") cloth. This country produces the six domestic animals [traditionally: horses, cattle, sheep, chickens, dogs and pigs], which are all said to come from the water. It is said that they not only use sheep's wool, but also bark from trees, or the silk from wild silkworms, to make brocade, mats, pile rugs, woven cloth and curtains, all of them of good quality, and with brighter colours than those made in the countries of Haidong (East of the Sea).[14]

The c. 5th century AD Hou Hanshu ("Book of the Eastern Han") expresses doubt about "water sheep" in the "Products of Daqin" section. "They also have a fine cloth which some people say is made from the down of 'water sheep,' but which is made, in fact, from the cocoons of wild silkworms".[15] The historian Fan Ye (398–445 AD), author of the Hou Hanshu, notes this section's information comes from the report that General Ban Yong (son of General Ban Chao, 32–102 AD) presented to the Emperor in 125. Both Bans administered the Western Regions on the Silk Road.

The (945 AD) Tang shu "Book of Tang" mentioned Haixi cloth from Folin (Byzantine Syria), which Emil Bretschneider first identified as sea silk from Greece. "There is also a stuff woven from the hair of sea-sheep, and called hai si pu (stuff from the western sea)". He notes, "This is, perhaps, the Byssus, a clothstuff woven up to the present time by the Mediterranean coast, especially in Southern Italy, from the thread-like excrescences of several sea-shells, (especially Pinna nobilis)."[16]

The early 6th century AD Shuyiji ("Records of Strange Things") mentions silk woven by Jiaoren, "jiao-dragon people", which Edward H. Schafer identifies as sea silk.

In the midst of the South Sea are the houses of the kău people who dwell in the water like fish, but have not given up weaving at the loom. Their eyes have the power to weep, but what they bring forth is pearls.[17]

This aquatic type of raw silk was called jiaoxiao, "mermaid silk", or jiaonujuan , "mermaid women's silk".

Modern Europe

The earliest usage of the English name sea silk remains uncertain, but the Oxford English Dictionary defines sea-silkworm as "a bivalve mollusc of the genus Pinna."[18]

Alexander Serov's 1863 opera Judith includes an aria "I shall don my robe of byssus" (Я оденусь в виссон).[19][20]

In Jules Verne's 1870 novel 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, the crew of the Nautilus wear clothes made of byssus (alternately translated as "seashell tissue" or "fan-mussel fabric").[21]

Pinna nobilis has become threatened with extinction, partly due to overfishing, the decline in seagrass fields, and pollution. As it has declined so dramatically, the once small but vibrant sea silk industry has almost disappeared, and the art is now preserved only by a few women on the island of Sant'Antioco near Sardinia. Chiara Vigo claimed on various media to be the sole person living today to master the art of working with byssus[22][23] and the local people helped her to open the Sea Silk Museum in Sant'Antioco. "Project Sea-Silk" from the Natural History Museum of Basel[24] is collecting extensive data and studies on the subject, and informs the public that a couple of other women still produce and work today with byssus in Sant'Antioco in Sardinia, such as the sisters Assuntina and Giuseppina Pes, which contradicts the claims of Chiara Vigo who is credited as having "invented with an extraordinary imagination her own story of sea-silk and [spinning] it tirelessly and to the delight of all media on and on".[25] In 2013, Efisia Murroni, a 100-year-old sea silk master weaver nicknamed "la signora del bisso" (born in 1913) died and her work is now shown in the Museo Etnografico di Sant'Antioco, with other artefacts being already on display in various museums throughout Europe.[26]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ In Spirals in Time, Scales puts forward the idea that "a pair of women's gloves made from the fabric could fit into half a walnut shell" actually refers to Limerick gloves made from a fine kid leather that were sold inside walnut shells as a marketing stunt. Over time, the walnut packaging and beliefs about byssus cloth were conflated. (151–152.)

Citations

  1. ^ "The Last Surviving Sea Silk Seamstress". BBC. 6 September 2017.
  2. ^ Webster's (Third New International Dictionary (Unabridged) ed.). G. & C. Merriam Co. 1976. p. 307.
  3. ^ "Chiara Vigo: The Last Woman Who Makes Sea Silk". BBC. 2 September 2015.
  4. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (1971), under Byssus.
  5. ^ Translation of the Greek section of the Rosetta Stone.
  6. ^ "Elfinspell: Book I, Alciphron, Literally and Completely Translated From the Greek, with Introduction and Notes, Greek sophist, online text, Athenian Society Publications III, anonymous translator English translation, 2nd–5th century A.D.: Early Christian Era, satire, prose, literature, online text; 13th century poetry, literature". www.elfinspell.com. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  7. ^ Verrill, A. Hyatt (1950). Shell Collector's Handbook. New York: Putnam. p. 77.
  8. ^ McKinley, Daniel (1999). "Pinna And Her Silken Beard: A Foray Into Historical Misappropriations". Ars Textrina. 29: 9–29.
  9. ^ Tr. Laufer 1915:109.
  10. ^ Maeder 2002, p. 10.
  11. ^ Turner and Rosewater 1958, p. 294.
  12. ^ Tr. Laufer 1915:111.
  13. ^ In Modern Standard Chinese usage, Haixi denotes "western; foreign" names such as Haixi Jurchens and Haixi Mongol and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.
  14. ^ Tr. Hill 2004; probably referring to the region of Persis in modern-day Iran
  15. ^ Tr. Hill 2003.
  16. ^ Tr. Bretschneider 1871, p. 24
  17. ^ Tr. Schafer 1967:220-1.
  18. ^ OED2, under Sea, n. 23 (d).
  19. ^ "Опера Серова "Юдифь" (Judith) – Belcanto.ru". www.belcanto.ru. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  20. ^ dtshu (8 April 2011). . Archived from the original on 2020-04-12. Retrieved 9 April 2018 – via YouTube.
  21. ^ Verne, Jules (1870). "Chapter 15: Une invitation par lettre". Vingt mille lieues sous les mers. Paris: Hetzel. pp. 110–118.
  22. ^ Maeder, Hänggi, and Wunderlin 2004, pp. 68–71.
  23. ^ Paradiso, Max (2 September 2015). "Chiara Vigo: The last woman who makes sea silk". BBC News.
  24. ^ "Muschelseide – Project Sea-silk". www.muschelseide.ch. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  25. ^ "Muschelseide – 20th century". www.muschelseide.ch. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  26. ^ "Muschelseide – Attualità". www.muschelseide.ch. Retrieved 9 April 2018.

References

  • Bretschneider, Emil. 1871. On the Knowledge Possessed by the Ancient Chinese of the Arabs and Arabian Colonies and Other Western Countries. Trubner.
  • Hill, John E. (2009) Through the Jade Gate to Rome: A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty, 1st to 2nd Centuries CE. John E. Hill. BookSurge, Charleston, South Carolina. ISBN 978-1-4392-2134-1. See Section 12 plus "Appendix B – Sea Silk".
  • Hill, John E. 2004. The Peoples of the West. A draft annotated translation of the 3rd century Weilüe – see Section 12 of the text and Appendix D.
  • Laufer, Berthold. 1915. "The Story of the Pinna and the Syrian Lamb", The Journal of American Folk-lore 28.108:103–128.
  • McKinley, Daniel L. 1988. "Pinna and Her Silken Beard: A Foray into Historical Misappropriations". Ars Textrina: A Journal of Textiles and Costumes, Vol. Twenty-nine, June, 1998, Winnipeg, Canada, pp. 9–223.
  • Maeder, Felicitas 2002. "The project Sea-silk – Rediscovering an Ancient Textile Material." Archaeological Textiles Newsletter, Number 35, Autumn 2002, pp. 8–11.
  • Maeder, Felicitas, Hänggi, Ambros and Wunderlin, Dominik, Eds. 2004. Bisso marino: Fili d’oro dal fondo del mare – Muschelseide: Goldene Fäden vom Meeresgrund. Naturhistoriches Museum and Museum der Kulturen, Basel, Switzerland. (In Italian and German).
  • Maeder, Felicitas. (2014). "Irritating Byssus – Etymological problems, material facts and the impact of mass media." Paper presented at: Textile Terminologies from the Orient to the Mediterranean and Europe 1000 BC – AD 1000. Copenhagen, 18–22 June 2014, pp. 1–17.
  • Scales, Helen. 2015. Spirals in Time: The Secret Life and Curious Afterlife of Seashells. Bloomsbury Sigma.
  • Schafer, Edward H. 1967. The Vermillion Bird: T'ang Images of the South. University of California Press.
  • Turner, Ruth D. and Rosewater, Joseph 1958. "The Family Pinnidae in the Western Atlantic". Johnsonia, Vol. 3 No. 38, June 28, 1958, pp. 285–326.

External Links

  • Arte TV: Silk of the Sea (1 hr. documentary)

silk, extremely, fine, rare, valuable, fabric, that, made, from, long, silky, filaments, byssus, secreted, gland, foot, shells, particular, pinna, nobilis, byssus, used, clam, attach, itself, knitted, glove, made, silk, from, taranto, italy, probably, from, la. Sea silk is an extremely fine rare and valuable fabric that is made from the long silky filaments or byssus secreted by a gland in the foot of pen shells in particular Pinna nobilis 1 The byssus is used by the clam to attach itself to the sea bed 2 Knitted glove made of sea silk from Taranto Italy probably from the late 19th centuryPinna nobilis shell and byssusThe extreme fineness of the byssus threadSea silk was produced in the Mediterranean region from the large marine bivalve mollusc Pinna nobilis until early in the 20th century The animal whose shell is sometimes almost a metre long adheres itself pointed end down to rocks in the intertidal zone using a tuft of very strong thin fibres These byssi or filaments which can be six centimetres long are spun and when treated with lemon juice turn a golden colour which never fades 3 The cloth produced from these filaments can be woven even more finely than silk and is extremely light and warm it was said that a pair of women s gloves made from the fabric could fit into half a walnut shell and a pair of stockings in a snuffbox 4 note 1 The cloth attracts clothes moths the larvae of which will eat it Pinna nobilis is also sometimes gathered for its edible flesh and occasional pearls of fair quality Contents 1 History 1 1 Egypt 1 2 Greece 1 3 Roman Empire 1 4 Arabia 1 5 China 1 6 Modern Europe 2 See also 3 Footnotes 4 Citations 5 ReferencesHistory EditEgypt Edit The Greek text of the 196 BC Rosetta Stone records that Ptolemy V reduced taxes on priests including one paid in byssus cloth This is thought to be fine linen cloth 5 not sea silk In Ancient Egyptian burial customs byssus was used to wrap mummies this was also linen and not sea silk Greece Edit The sophist author Alciphron first records sea wool in his c 2nd century AD Galenus to Cryton letter 6 Sea silk has been suggested as an interpretation of the nature of the golden fleece that was sought by Jason and the Argonauts 7 but scholars reject this hypothesis 8 Roman Empire Edit The early Christian Tertullian c 160 220 AD mentions it when justifying his wearing a pallium instead of a toga Nor was it enough to comb and to sew the materials for a tunic It was necessary also to fish for one s dress for fleeces are obtained from the sea where shells of extraordinary size are furnished with tufts of mossy hair 9 Several sources mention lana pinna pinna wool Emperor Diocletian s 301 AD Edict on Maximum Prices lists it as a valuable textile 10 The Byzantine historian Procopius s c 550 AD Persian War stated that the five hereditary satraps governors of Armenia who received their insignia from the Roman Emperor were given chlamys or cloaks made from lana pinna Apparently only the ruling classes were allowed to wear these chlamys 11 Arabia Edit The Arabic name for sea silk is ṣuf al baḥr sea wool The 9th century Persian geographer Estakhri notes that a sea wool robe cost more than 1000 gold pieces and records its mythic source At a certain period of the year an animal is seen running out of the sea and rubbing itself against certain stones of the littoral whereupon it deposes a kind of wool of silken hue and golden colour This wool is very rare and highly esteemed and nothing of it is allowed to waste 12 Two 13th century authors Ibn al Baitar and Zakariya al Qazwini repeat this inaccurate sea wool story China Edit Beginning in the Eastern Han dynasty 25 220 AD Chinese histories document importing sea silk Chinese language names include cloth from the west of the sea and mermaid silk The 3rd century AD Weilue or Brief Account of the Wei which was an unofficial history of the Cao Wei empire 220 265 AD records haixi West of the Sea cloth made from shuiyang water sheep 13 They have fine brocaded cloth that is said to be made from the down of water sheep It is called Haixi Egyptian cloth This country produces the six domestic animals traditionally horses cattle sheep chickens dogs and pigs which are all said to come from the water It is said that they not only use sheep s wool but also bark from trees or the silk from wild silkworms to make brocade mats pile rugs woven cloth and curtains all of them of good quality and with brighter colours than those made in the countries of Haidong East of the Sea 14 The c 5th century AD Hou Hanshu Book of the Eastern Han expresses doubt about water sheep in the Products of Daqin section They also have a fine cloth which some people say is made from the down of water sheep but which is made in fact from the cocoons of wild silkworms 15 The historian Fan Ye 398 445 AD author of the Hou Hanshu notes this section s information comes from the report that General Ban Yong son of General Ban Chao 32 102 AD presented to the Emperor in 125 Both Bans administered the Western Regions on the Silk Road The 945 AD Tang shu Book of Tang mentioned Haixi cloth from Folin Byzantine Syria which Emil Bretschneider first identified as sea silk from Greece There is also a stuff woven from the hair of sea sheep and called hai si pu stuff from the western sea He notes This is perhaps the Byssus a clothstuff woven up to the present time by the Mediterranean coast especially in Southern Italy from the thread like excrescences of several sea shells especially Pinna nobilis 16 The early 6th century AD Shuyiji Records of Strange Things mentions silk woven by Jiaoren jiao dragon people which Edward H Schafer identifies as sea silk In the midst of the South Sea are the houses of the kău people who dwell in the water like fish but have not given up weaving at the loom Their eyes have the power to weep but what they bring forth is pearls 17 This aquatic type of raw silk was called jiaoxiao mermaid silk or jiaonujuan mermaid women s silk Modern Europe Edit The earliest usage of the English name sea silk remains uncertain but the Oxford English Dictionary defines sea silkworm as a bivalve mollusc of the genus Pinna 18 Alexander Serov s 1863 opera Judith includes an aria I shall don my robe of byssus Ya odenus v visson 19 20 In Jules Verne s 1870 novel 20 000 Leagues Under the Sea the crew of the Nautilus wear clothes made of byssus alternately translated as seashell tissue or fan mussel fabric 21 Pinna nobilis has become threatened with extinction partly due to overfishing the decline in seagrass fields and pollution As it has declined so dramatically the once small but vibrant sea silk industry has almost disappeared and the art is now preserved only by a few women on the island of Sant Antioco near Sardinia Chiara Vigo claimed on various media to be the sole person living today to master the art of working with byssus 22 23 and the local people helped her to open the Sea Silk Museum in Sant Antioco Project Sea Silk from the Natural History Museum of Basel 24 is collecting extensive data and studies on the subject and informs the public that a couple of other women still produce and work today with byssus in Sant Antioco in Sardinia such as the sisters Assuntina and Giuseppina Pes which contradicts the claims of Chiara Vigo who is credited as having invented with an extraordinary imagination her own story of sea silk and spinning it tirelessly and to the delight of all media on and on 25 In 2013 Efisia Murroni a 100 year old sea silk master weaver nicknamed la signora del bisso born in 1913 died and her work is now shown in the Museo Etnografico di Sant Antioco with other artefacts being already on display in various museums throughout Europe 26 See also EditCoa vestis a textile made in ancient Greece from wild silk Footnotes Edit In Spirals in Time Scales puts forward the idea that a pair of women s gloves made from the fabric could fit into half a walnut shell actually refers to Limerick gloves made from a fine kid leather that were sold inside walnut shells as a marketing stunt Over time the walnut packaging and beliefs about byssus cloth were conflated 151 152 Citations Edit The Last Surviving Sea Silk Seamstress BBC 6 September 2017 Webster s Third New International Dictionary Unabridged ed G amp C Merriam Co 1976 p 307 Chiara Vigo The Last Woman Who Makes Sea Silk BBC 2 September 2015 Oxford English Dictionary 1971 under Byssus Translation of the Greek section of the Rosetta Stone Elfinspell Book I Alciphron Literally and Completely Translated From the Greek with Introduction and Notes Greek sophist online text Athenian Society Publications III anonymous translator English translation 2nd 5th century A D Early Christian Era satire prose literature online text 13th century poetry literature www elfinspell com Retrieved 9 April 2018 Verrill A Hyatt 1950 Shell Collector s Handbook New York Putnam p 77 McKinley Daniel 1999 Pinna And Her Silken Beard A Foray Into Historical Misappropriations Ars Textrina 29 9 29 Tr Laufer 1915 109 Maeder 2002 p 10 Turner and Rosewater 1958 p 294 Tr Laufer 1915 111 In Modern Standard Chinese usage Haixi denotes western foreign names such as Haixi Jurchens and Haixi Mongol and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture Tr Hill 2004 probably referring to the region of Persis in modern day Iran Tr Hill 2003 Tr Bretschneider 1871 p 24 Tr Schafer 1967 220 1 OED2 under Sea n 23 d Opera Serova Yudif Judith Belcanto ru www belcanto ru Retrieved 9 April 2018 dtshu 8 April 2011 Natalija Ermolenko Yuzhina I shall don my robe of byssus Serov Judith rec 1909 Archived from the original on 2020 04 12 Retrieved 9 April 2018 via YouTube Verne Jules 1870 Chapter 15 Une invitation par lettre Vingt mille lieues sous les mers Paris Hetzel pp 110 118 Maeder Hanggi and Wunderlin 2004 pp 68 71 Paradiso Max 2 September 2015 Chiara Vigo The last woman who makes sea silk BBC News Muschelseide Project Sea silk www muschelseide ch Retrieved 9 April 2018 Muschelseide 20th century www muschelseide ch Retrieved 9 April 2018 Muschelseide Attualita www muschelseide ch Retrieved 9 April 2018 References EditBretschneider Emil 1871 On the Knowledge Possessed by the Ancient Chinese of the Arabs and Arabian Colonies and Other Western Countries Trubner Hill John E 2009 Through the Jade Gate to Rome A Study of the Silk Routes during the Later Han Dynasty 1st to 2nd Centuries CE John E Hill BookSurge Charleston South Carolina ISBN 978 1 4392 2134 1 See Section 12 plus Appendix B Sea Silk Hill John E 2004 The Peoples of the West A draft annotated translation of the 3rd century Weilue see Section 12 of the text and Appendix D Laufer Berthold 1915 The Story of the Pinna and the Syrian Lamb The Journal of American Folk lore 28 108 103 128 McKinley Daniel L 1988 Pinna and Her Silken Beard A Foray into Historical Misappropriations Ars Textrina A Journal of Textiles and Costumes Vol Twenty nine June 1998 Winnipeg Canada pp 9 223 Maeder Felicitas 2002 The project Sea silk Rediscovering an Ancient Textile Material Archaeological Textiles Newsletter Number 35 Autumn 2002 pp 8 11 Maeder Felicitas Hanggi Ambros and Wunderlin Dominik Eds 2004 Bisso marino Fili d oro dal fondo del mare Muschelseide Goldene Faden vom Meeresgrund Naturhistoriches Museum and Museum der Kulturen Basel Switzerland In Italian and German Maeder Felicitas 2014 Irritating Byssus Etymological problems material facts and the impact of mass media Paper presented at Textile Terminologies from the Orient to the Mediterranean and Europe 1000 BC AD 1000 Copenhagen 18 22 June 2014 pp 1 17 Scales Helen 2015 Spirals in Time The Secret Life and Curious Afterlife of Seashells Bloomsbury Sigma Schafer Edward H 1967 The Vermillion Bird T ang Images of the South University of California Press Turner Ruth D and Rosewater Joseph 1958 The Family Pinnidae in the Western Atlantic Johnsonia Vol 3 No 38 June 28 1958 pp 285 326 External Links Arte TV Silk of the Sea 1 hr documentary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sea silk amp oldid 1163524623, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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