This dissertation is about Late Iron Age (AD 800–1055/1300) woollen, visually colourful textile fragments. The aim is to identify the dyeing methods used in Finland during the Late Iron Age and to find the locally used dyestuffs. This dissertation focuses on the archaeological samples from inhumation burials and shipwrecks, which were analysed with visual analysis and microscopy observation. The reference material includes woollen yarns dyed with Finnish traditionally known dye sources.
The archaeological samples and the dyed references were analysed chromatographically at the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands (RCE) and at the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA) in Belgium by HPLC (High performance liquid chromatography) and UHPLC (Ultra High performance liquid chromatography). Mordants were analysed at the Nanomicroscopy Center of Aalto University in Finland by SEM-EDX (Scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy). Experimental archaeology was used to reconstruct the actual dyeing methods of red tannins, lichen orchil and plant mordants as well as to test the sustainability of these dyes and the effect of dyeing methods on wool yarns.
The results suggest that three different dyeing methods were used in Late Iron Age Finland: vat dyeing, mordant dyeing and fermentation of tannins. Red tannins were obtained from tree barks such as alder buckthorn (Rhamnus frangula) and roots of common tormentil (Potentilla erecta). Red anthraquinones were obtained from local bedstraws (Galium boreale, Galium album and Galium verum). Mordants for dyes were prepared by fermenting clubmosses (Lycopodium species) and horsetails (Equisetum silvaticum and Equisetum arvense). Eagles’ fern (Pteridium aquilinum), common chickweed (Stellaria media) and red sorrel (Rumex acetosella) were also used in mordanting. Woad (Isatis tinctoria) was used for blue dyeing. Purple was obtained from orchil producing lichens such as rock tripe (Lasallia pustulata). Dyer’s madder (Rubia tinctorum) and the yellow flavonoid dyes such as weld (Reseda luteola) were interpreted to indicate textile import.
The Middle Ages offered new meanings for life and textile making, new handicraft methods and new dyestuffs, which ended the local prehistoric dyeing tradition. As a result of new cultural influences, red tannins were no longer used to strengthen yarns for warp-weighted loom nor were the blackish-blue and purple textiles dyed in vats in the Late Iron Age manner. The medieval culture provided a faster textile making process and offered horizontal looms and spinning wheels, the boiling method, alum and new dyestuffs.
Author(s): Krista Vajanto
Publisher: University of Helsinki
Year: 2015
Language: English
Pages: 192
City: Helsinki
1. Introduction 10
2. Theoretical framework 27
3. Research materials 30
4. Analytical methods 36
5. Results of the analyses 41
6. Discussion of colourants, mordants and dyeing methods 49
7. Conclusions 62
Sources 64
Appendix 1: Summary of Papers I–V 83
Appendix 2: Archaeological samples 88
Appendix 3: HPLC spectra of the archaeological Samples 1a–5c 94
Appendix 4: UHPLC and HPLC spectra of the archaeological Samples 8–16b 97
Appendix 5: HPLC results of the reference dyeings 102
Appendix 6: SEM-EDX results of the archaeological and reference samples 107
Appendix 7: Costume reconstructions based on Finnish Late Iron Age finds 112
Papers I–V
Paper I: Vajanto, K. and van Bommel, M. R. Dyed textiles from Late Iron Age Finland (2014)
Paper II: Vajanto, K. Nålbinding in Prehistoric Burials – Reinterpreting Finnish 11th–14th-century
AD Textile Fragments (2014)
Paper III: Vajanto, K. Finnish shipwreck textiles from the 13th– 18th centuries AD (2014)
Paper IV: Vajanto, K. Fibre Analysis of Late Iron Age, Early Modern and Modern Finnish Wools (2013)
Paper V: Vajanto, K. Textile standards in experimental archaeology (2014)