I recently visited the new exhibition at the British Museum entitled Silk Roads and was interested to see examples of ancient silk as well as wool and cotton. The exhibition emphasises the role of the Silk Road in the exchange of ideas and goods between east and west and, certainly as far as the textiles go, concentrates on the period between 600 and 900 AD. The main image shows an embroidery of the Buddha emerging from a mountain, worked in silk thread on a silk ground. It was found in the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang, China which was a major Buddhist complex.
The dyed silk
fragments in this image were patterned with a resist technique which uses
wooden clamps to cover parts of the material before it is put into the dye
bath. The pattern of geese and flowers in roundels was used in Central and West
Asia before it spread to China. The British Museum and Chinese experts have
managed to reconstruct this dying technique as well as a weaving technique used
to produce a silk textile known a samite. The example in the exhibition is a
sutra or cover for scrolls with a pattern of two lions facing each other; another
pattern that originated in Central Asia. Both the dyed silk and the sutra were
also found in the Mogao Caves.
The
exhibition also recounts the legend of the princess who travelled from the East
to marry the king of Khotan, bringing with her the secret of silk production,
by hiding silk worm cocoons and mulberry seeds in her headdress. The panel
shows her in the centre with a woman weaving silk and using a comb beater like
the one in the cabinet on the right.
As well as luxury
silks the exhibition also features another more utilitarian textile of the Silk
Road; wool. This shoe is made of felted wool with leather patches. It was found
in the guard station of a hill fort and would have had a drawstring tied round
the ankle to keep it in place.
Cotton also
features in the exhibition in the form of this funerary banner of a high
ranking Uyghur man. The history of the nomadic Uyghurs provides an example of
the movements of populations along the Silk Road. Originating from the
Mongolian Plateau they established an empire which lasted for 100 years.
Following its collapse, some of the population moved south west and by 866 AD
they had gained control of Gaochang in China, where they established the Kocho
kingdom. The inscription on this banner is in the Turkic language of Kocho.
The
exhibition also has examples of what may be Sogdian silk and fragments of woven
silk found in Egypt and traded in the Byzantine empire. I enjoyed the
exhibition but would have liked to have seen more textiles, however, I expect
this is a reflection of the small numbers of textiles that survive from that
time. There are some other beautiful artefacts, particularly jewellery, metal
work and books and the exhibition runs until 23 February 2025 if you are
interested in seeing it for yourself.