Content deleted Content added
→Use in Medieval Europe: add foto + caption |
→top: sd Tags: Mobile edit Mobile app edit Android app edit |
||
(21 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{other uses|Samite (disambiguation)}}
{{short description|Silk fabric}}
[[File:The "Martyr Cope" (1270).jpg|thumb|Detail from the "Martyr Cope" (1270), gold on red silk samite, brought from France in 1274. [[Uppsala Cathedral]] Treasury.|
'''Samite''' was a luxurious and heavy [[silk]] [[textile|fabric]] worn in the [[Middle Ages]], of a [[twill]]-type [[weaving|weave]], often including gold or silver thread. The word was derived from Old French ''samit'', from medieval Latin ''samitum, examitum'' deriving from the [[Byzantium|Byzantine]] [[Greek (language)|Greek]] ἑξάμιτον ''hexamiton'' "six threads", usually interpreted as indicating the use of six yarns in the [[warp (weaving)|warp]].<ref>''[http://www.oed.com/view/Entry/170388 Oxford English Dictionary Online]'' "samite" (subscription required), accessed 30 December 2010</ref><ref>Lisa Mannas, ''Merchants, Princes and Painters: Silk Fabrics in Northern and Italian Paintings 1300–1550'', Appendix I:III "Medieval Silk Fabric Types and Weaves", Yale University Press, 2008, {{ISBN
p. 297.</ref> Samite is still used in ecclesiastical robes, vestments, ornamental fabrics, and interior decoration.<ref>George E. Linton, The Modern Textile Dictionary, NY, 1954,
Structurally, samite is a [[weft]]-faced compound twill, plain or figured (patterned), in which the main [[warp (weaving)|warp]] threads are hidden on both sides of the fabric by the floats of the ground and patterning wefts, with only the binding warps visible.<ref name="AM">Anna Muthesius, "Silk in the Medieval World". In David Jenkins, ed.: ''The Cambridge History of Western Textiles'', Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2003, {{ISBN
==Origins and spread to Europe==
[[File:Pheasant roundel silk samite.jpg|thumb|Pheasant roundels on silk samite fragment, Central Asia, 7th or 8th century]]
Fragments of samite have been discovered at many locations along the [[Silk Road]],<ref>For an example, see [http://www.metmuseum.org/special/china/section_03_intro.asp "The Silk Road"], Metropolitan Museum of Art website, retrieved 24 May 2008</ref> and are especially associated with [[Sassanid]] [[Persia]].<ref>[http://www.lesenluminures.com/pdf/imagestisseesenglish.pdf ''Woven Textiles: Textiles from Antiquity to the Renaissance'', Gallery Les Enluminures] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080908083150/http://www.lesenluminures.com/pdf/imagestisseesenglish.pdf |date=2008-09-08 }}, retrieved 24 May 2008</ref> Samite was "arguably the most important" silk weave of [[Byzantium]],<ref name="AM" /> and from the 9th century [[Byzantine silk]]s entered [[Europe]] via the [[Italy|Italian]] trading ports. [[Vikings]], connected through their direct [[trade route]]s with [[Constantinople]], were buried in samite embroidered with silver-wound threads in the tenth century.<ref>[http://history.hanover.edu/courses/excerpts/344vil.html Carolyn Priest-Dorman, "Viking Embroidery"], noting published excavations of graves at [[Valsgärde]], Sweden.</ref> Silk weaving itself was established in [[Lucca]] and [[Venice]] in the 12th and 13th centuries, and the statutes of the silk-weaving guilds in Venice specifically distinguished ''sammet'' weavers from weavers of other types of silk cloth.<ref>Muthesius, "Silk in the Medieval World", p. 332-337</ref>
The [[Crusade]]s brought Europeans into direct contact with the Islamic world, and other sources of samite, as well as other Eastern luxuries. A samite saddle-cloth known in the West as the ''[[Suaire de St-Josse]]'', now in the [[Musée du Louvre]],<ref>[[Sheila S. Blair]] and [[Jonathan M. Bloom]], "The Mirage of Islamic Art: Reflections on the Study of an Unwieldy Field", ''The Art Bulletin'' '''85'''.1 (March 2003:152-184), p. 154, fig. 1.</ref> was woven in eastern [[Iran]], some time before 961, when Abu Mansur Bakhtegin, for whom it was woven, died; it was brought back from the [[First Crusade]] by [[Étienne de Blois]] and dedicated as a votive gift at the [[Saint Josse|Abbey of Saint-Josse]], near Boulogne. At the time of the [[First Crusade]], ''samite'' needed to be explained to a Western audience, as in the eye-witness ''[[Chanson d'Antioche]]'' (ccxxx):
<blockquote>Very quickly he took a translator and a large dromedary loaded with silver cloth, called "samite" in our language. He sent them to our fine, brave men...<ref>[http://www.bu.edu/english/levine/antioch.htm On-line translated text] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080516073521/http://www.bu.edu/english/levine/antioch.htm |date=2008-05-16 }}.</ref></blockquote>
The [[Fourth Crusade]] brought riches unknown in the West to the
==Use in Medieval Europe==
[[File:Sasanian Silk Samite cloth Circa 960.jpg|thumb|[[Sasanian]]
Samite was a royal tissue: in the 1250s it features among the clothing of fitting status provided for the innovative and style-conscious English king [[Henry III of England|Henry III]], his family, and his attendants. For those of royal blood there were robes and mantles of samite and [[cloth of gold]].<ref>Noted by James F. Willard, reviewing ''Close Rolls of the Reign of Henry III, A.D. 1251-1253'' in ''Speculum,'' '''4'''.2 (April 1929:
In the wrong hands, samite could threaten the outward marks of social stability; samite was specified among the luxuries forbidden the urban middle classes in [[sumptuary law]]s by the court of [[René of Anjou]] about 1470: "In cities mercantile governments outlawed crowns, trains, cloth of samite and precious metals, ermine trims, and other pretensions of aristocratic fashion" <ref>Diane Owen Hughes, "Regulating women's fashion", in ''A History of Women in the West: Silences of the Middle Ages'', Georges Duby et al. (Harvard University Press) 1992:139.</ref> In Florence, when the ''[[condottiero]]'' [[Walter VI of Brienne|Walter of Brienne]] offered the innovation of a sumptuous feast to [[Saint John the Baptist|San Giovanni]] in 1343, the chronicler [[Giovanni Villani|Villani]] noted among the rich trappings "He added to the other side of the ''palio''<ref>San Giovanni's banner.</ref> of crimson samite cloth a trim of gray squirrel skin as long as the pole."<ref>Villani, ''Chronicle'', quoted in Richard C. Trexler, ''Public Life in Renaissance Florence'' (Cornell University Press) 1980:257f.</ref>
==
* [[Coptic art#Textiles|Coptic textiles]]
* [[Sampul tapestry]]
* [[Sichuan embroidery]]
* [[Sogdian art#Textile arts|Sogdian textiles]]
==Notes==
Line 49 ⟶ 35:
* [http://www.greydragon.org/trips/stockholm/index4.html Embroidered red samite cope from 1270]
* [http://www.akdn.org/museum/detail.asp?artifactid=1632 Samite robe] 8th-11th century CE Aga Khan Museum
* [
* [
* [http://www.metmuseum.org/search-results?ft=samite&x=0&y=0 Textile samples] from New York's [Metropolitan Museum]
* [http://www.metmuseum.org/explore/china_dawn/essay_silk.html Samite fragment] from [Turfan], with pattern in weave (broken link)
Line 56 ⟶ 42:
{{fabric}}
[[Category:Medieval European costume]]
[[Category:Medieval textile design]]
[[Category:Silk]]
|