- African textiles
The earliest surviving sub-
Sahara n "'African textiles" are cloth fragments and or parchment fragments that date to the ninth century BCE from sites atIgbo Ukwu in of theIgbo people Nigeria . Some twelfth century cloth fragments date from theTellem caves inMali . Surviving thirteenth century samples originate fromBenin City and Nigeria. [Christopher Spring, "African Textiles", (New York: Crescent) 1989, p. 3]African textiles are a part of African
cultural heritage that came to America along with theslave trade . As manyslaves were skilled in theweaving , this skill was used as another form of income for the slave owner. In most ofAfrica the weavers were men while the women spun thethread . The weavers in many of the countries were part of acaste -like group and sometimes slaves to noble families. InYoruba compounds were used where master weavers would teach all the boys weaving and all the girls would learn to spin and dye theyarn .Cultural Significance
Weaving has many spiritual and mythical meaning behind it. One, is that from the Dogons who believe that each stage of spinning and weaving thread is a symbolic analogy to human reproduction and resurrection. With this, they believe that the processes of spinning and weaving could only be done in daylight hours. To work at night would be to weave silence and darkness into the cloth. The color of the cloth can also have some spiritual meaning also. In one tribe a white cloth used by healing women is thought to be linked to water spirits. Although there are many meanings to the designs on the cloth very few are directly represented on the cloth itself.
Textiles were also used as a form of identity with each tribe having their own unique patterns which also made it easy to spot outsiders. Many different types of patterns were formed in places that specialized in weaving. Kings would request several types of cloth to show their prestige and importance. Kings would even compare themselves by how many robes they had and what they were made out of. Weaving and the textiles were and still are very important to the African culture. The textiles included both men and women and the cloth they made was unique to their tribe through the patterns and spiritual meanings behind them.References
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