About This Book
A cultural and technological history of the household spinning implement traces its development from prehistoric hand-distaff methods through archaeological and artistic evidence in ancient societies to the later appearance of the wheel. The essay surveys practical spinning techniques, the manufacture and use of linen and other fibres, and the implement’s close ties to agricultural and domestic labor. It also considers symbolic meanings attached to spinning, showing how the tool became an emblem of women’s work, household economy, and communal identity across regions and eras.
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