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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
<journal-id journal-id-type="publisher"/>
<journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>Archaeology International</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
<issn>2048-4194</issn>
<publisher>
                <publisher-name>Ubiquity Press</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
</journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
<article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.5334/ai.1602</article-id>
<article-categories>
                <subj-group>
                    <subject>News</subject>
                </subj-group>
            </article-categories>
<title-group>
                <article-title>Production and Consumption: Textile Economy and Urbanisation in
                    Mediterranean Europe 1000–500 BCE (PROCON)</article-title>
            </title-group>
<contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name name-style="western">
<surname>Gleba</surname>
<given-names>Margarita</given-names>
</name>
                    <email>m.gleba@ucl.ac.uk</email>
                    <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff-1"/>
                </contrib>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name name-style="western">
<surname>Harris</surname>
<given-names>Susanna</given-names>
</name>
                    <email>susanna.harris@ucl.ac.uk</email>
                    <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff-1"/>
                </contrib>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name name-style="western">
<surname>Cutler</surname>
<given-names>Joanne</given-names>
</name>
                    <email>j.cutler@ucl.ac.uk</email>
                    <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff-1"/>
                </contrib>
<aff id="aff-1">UCL Institute of Archaeology, London WC1H 0PY, United Kingdom, <ext-link ext-link-type="url" xlink:href="https://www.ucl.ac.ul/procon">https://www.ucl.ac.uk/procon</ext-link>
</aff>
</contrib-group>
<pub-date pub-type="epub" publication-format="online">
	 <day>24</day>
                <month>10</month>
                <year>2013</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>16</volume>
<issue>1</issue>
<fpage>54</fpage>
<lpage>58</lpage>
<permissions>
<copyright-statement>© 2013 The Author(s)</copyright-statement>
<copyright-year>2013</copyright-year>
<license license-type="open-access" xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/">
                    <license-p>This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the
                        Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY 3.0), which permits
                        unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the
                        original author and source are credited. See <uri xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/</uri>.</license-p>
                </license>
</permissions>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.ai-journal.com/article/view/ai.1602"/>











            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
        </article-meta>
    </front>
   <body>
        <p>PROCON is a new project hosted by the UCL Institute of Archaeology, funded by a European
            Research Council starting grant (No. 312603). The aim of the project is to test the
            hypothesis that textile production and consumption was a significant driving force of
            the economy and of the creation and perception of wealth in Mediterranean Europe during
            the period of urbanisation and early urbanism in 1000–500 BCE. The overarching
            question to be answered is: To what extent did textile production and consumption define
            the development of productive and commercial activities of early urban Mediterranean
            societies in the Iron Age?</p>
        <p>The past few years have witnessed a major dynamism in the field of archaeological textile
            research in Europe, as demonstrated by numerous conferences and publications on the
            topic, as well as the establishment of large-scale interdisciplinary collaborative
            programmes, such as the Centre for Textile Research (CTR), funded by the Danish National
            Research Foundation (2005–2015), and the pan-European project ‘Clothing and
            Identities – New Perspectives on Textiles in the Roman Empire’ (DressID),
            funded by the European Union Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency
            (2007–2012). The impetus created by these projects has provided an important arena
            for the development of new research techniques and approaches. From this basis, the
            necessary next step is to lead this growing field into answering some of the fundamental
            questions of archaeology, where evidence for textiles has hitherto been virtually
            unexplored.</p>
        <p>It has been convincingly demonstrated that intensive production and consumption of
            textiles was at the heart of urbanisation throughout the history of the world. The lords
            of the Inka state extracted heavy tribute of cloth from its peasants, which in turn
            clothed and sheltered the army, dressed its lords and citizens and filled its
            storehouses. In 18th-century England, the Industrial Revolution was fuelled by the
            desire of the nobility and aspiring middle classes to invest in cloth and clothing, with
            its chance for self-promotion and political investiture. In the ancient past a similar
            pattern is recognisable in the emergence of the Bronze Age urban state centres of
            Mesopotamia and the Aegean. There, early written state archives provide abundant
            evidence of the importance of textile production and consumption in the formation of the
            political systems synonymous with urbanisation. Archaeologists have focused particular
            attention on the floruit of urbanism in the 1st millennium BCE in ancient Greece, Italy
            and Spain (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B1">Osborne and Cunliffe, 2005</xref>). Yet,
            despite the promising early evidence for the influence of textiles in the Bronze Age
            eastern Mediterranean, the role of textiles in the formation of these Iron Age
            Mediterranean urban centres is largely unexplored.</p>
        <p>The focus of the PROCON project is on the significance of the production and consumption
            of textiles for the development of city-states (as clothing, elite regalia, trade and
            exchange items) and the implications of this for other aspects of the economy, such as
            the use of farm land, labour resources and the development of urban lifestyle. This aim
            is achieved by addressing the following research questions: how was this production and
            consumption organised; where did the various resources come from; what were the
            technologies used; and what was the level of organisation? Who was involved in textile
            production and consumption? What was the quality and quantity of textiles produced, and
            how did they change over time in response to urban consumer demands?</p>
        <p>In exploring these questions the project not only follows a functional approach, but also
            considers the value ascribed to these goods and the customs that came with them. The
            questions outlined above lead to the following objectives for the PROCON project:</p>
        <list list-type="number">
            <list-item>
                <p>To evaluate the availability and the degree of exploitation of the various
                    resources for textile production;</p>
            </list-item>
            <list-item>
                <p>To assess the technological and organisational parameters of textile
                    production;</p>
            </list-item>
            <list-item>
                <p>To explore the consumption of textiles as clothing and utilitarian goods, and to
                    trace the increased demand both for clothing, through changes in fashion and in
                    wealth accumulation, and for sail cloth, with increased mobility;</p>
            </list-item>
            <list-item>
                <p>To identify the modes, means and directions (through time and space) of the
                    resource, of the technology and of textile consumption and exchange;</p>
            </list-item>
            <list-item>
                <p>On the basis of the above, to provide a new reading of economic history for the
                    period and area under consideration that sees textile production and consumption
                    as a major economic factor during the urbanisation of Early Iron Age
                    Mediterranean Europe.</p>
            </list-item>
        </list>
        <p>Using established and novel approaches to textile research, the project results aim to
            change the landscape of urbanisation research by providing new data sets demonstrating
            textile production and consumption as major economic and social factors. This project is
            unique in that it takes developments in a specialist research field (textile
            archaeology) and applies them to modelling the dynamics behind the broader phenomenon of
            urbanisation in Europe.</p>
        <p>In terms of scale, project PROCON is concerned with broad patterns and adopts a
            Mediterranean-wide rather than a regional perspective, along with recent scholarship on
            the 1st-millennium BCE Mediterranean (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B3">Vlassopoulos,
                2007</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B2">Riva, 2010</xref>). In doing so, the
            project explores similarities and differences between the different regions as they
            followed their trajectories towards urbanisation. The economy of textile production is
            furthermore conceived as a network that stimulated the mobility of goods, people, ideas
            and technologies in the context of developing urbanisation.</p>
        <p>The project structure thus encompasses four research strands within the operational
            sequence (<italic>chaîne opératoire</italic>) of textile economy: Resources;
            Production; Product; and Consumption and Exchange (Fig.<xref ref-type="fig" rid="F1">1</xref>). The project is highly interdisciplinary and will draw on methods from
            the fields of archaeology, biology, geology, chemistry, art history and classics,
            examining archaeological textiles (Figs <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F2">2</xref>–<xref ref-type="fig" rid="F5">5</xref>), textile tools Fig. <xref ref-type="fig" rid="F6">6</xref>), palaeoenvironmental remains, iconographic and
            written sources. The planned research will result in a major step forward in our
            understanding of the economic and social role of textiles in ancient societies.</p>
        <fig id="F1" orientation="portrait" position="float">
            <label>Fig. 1</label>
            <caption>
                <p>PROCON project structure, encompassing the <italic>chaîne
                        opératoire</italic> of textile economy: Resources; Production; Product;
                    and Consumption and Exchange.</p>
            </caption>
            <graphic xlink:href="Fig01_web.png" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
        </fig>
        <fig id="F2" orientation="portrait" position="float">
            <label>Fig. 2</label>
            <caption>
                <p>Studying archaeological textiles using digital microscopy at the National
                    Archaeological Museum of Adria, Italy (photo: Eugene Kokorin).</p>
            </caption>
            <graphic xlink:href="Fig02_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
        </fig>
        <fig id="F3" orientation="portrait" position="float">
            <label>Fig. 3</label>
            <caption>
                <p>Archaeological textile preserved on a 6th-century BCE bronze fibula from central
                    Italy; whereas organically preserved textiles are generally rare on northern
                    Mediterranean Iron Age sites, small fragments do survive under special
                    conditions (micrograph: Margarita Gleba).</p>
            </caption>
            <graphic xlink:href="Fig03_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
        </fig>
        <fig id="F4" orientation="portrait" position="float">
            <label>Fig. 4</label>
            <caption>
                <p>Mineralised textile preserved on a 7th-century BCE iron fibula from central
                    Italy; even when minute, such traces provide important information about the
                    technical aspects of the original textile, and what it was made of (micrograph:
                    Margarita Gleba).</p>
            </caption>
            <graphic xlink:href="Fig04_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
        </fig>
        <fig id="F5" orientation="portrait" position="float">
            <label>Fig. 5</label>
            <caption>
                <p>Scanning Electron Microscope image of an archaeological wool fibre from a
                    6th-century BCE textile from northern Italy; wool quality analysis based on
                    fibre diameter measurements is important for tracing the development of wool and
                    sheep (image: Margarita Gleba).</p>
            </caption>
            <graphic xlink:href="Fig05_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
        </fig>
        <fig id="F6" orientation="portrait" position="float">
            <label>Fig. 6</label>
            <caption>
                <p>Statistical analysis of textile tools provides important information about the
                    textile types that they were used to make, with contextual data allowing
                    conclusions about the organisation of production; loom-weights from Miletos,
                    Turkey, dating to the Bronze Age-Hellenistic period (photo: Margarita
                    Gleba).</p>
            </caption>
            <graphic xlink:href="Fig06_web.jpg" orientation="portrait" position="float"/>
        </fig>
    </body>
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</article>
