Title
Pyramidal loom weight
Date
6th-4th century BCE
Creator
Unknown
South Italian, Peucetian
Coverage
Style/Period: South Italian, Peucetian
Discovery Site: Discovered in Eastern Apulia (Puglia), Bari province, Italy
Repository: Museum of Classical Antiquities, University of Ottawa / Musée d'antiquités gréco-romaines, Université d'Ottawa
Collection: Donati Collection
Type
tools, equipment and materials
Format
Materials/Techniques: terracotta (clay material)
Measurements: 7.5 cm high, 3.9 cm wide, 3.4 cm deep, 84 g
Description
Loom weights are used to keep the warp (vertical) threads of the warp-weighted loom pulled tight and in place during weaving. This loom weight should be dated to the Archaic or Classical period on the basis of comparison to other loom weights from dated contexts, including loom weights in dated tomb assemblages in eastern Apulia, where this loom weight was found. In Italy most loom weights were made of fired clay, in coarse or fine fabric.This loom weight is made of a coarse ware type fabric, orange beige in colour; the surfaces of all four sides at the top are darker, and the colour is mottled (orange and black); however the colour starts from an even horizontal line, suggests that the loom weight was dipped in glaze before firing, and subsequently misfired resulting in the mottling; alternatively the entire loom weight may have been glazed, in which case the even colour at the top is simply a coincidence; there is an ovoid stamped impression on one side, possible a figure on a ship (?).
Identifier
Repository Accession Number: 2014.5.38
Record: UO-MCA-2014-5-38
Source
Cataloguer: Sabrina Mailloux and Antonia Holden (Curator), University of Ottawa
Photographer: Mélissa Mourez, University of Ottawa
Image Date: 2018-07-18
Rights
The images are provided by the Museum of Classical Antiquities, University of Ottawa. For contact information, visit the Museum website: https://arts.uottawa.ca/cla-srs/en/museum | Les images sont fournies par le Musée d'antiquités gréco-romaines de l'Université d’Ottawa. Visitez le site du musée pour les coordonnées : https://arts.uottawa.ca/cla-srs/fr/musee