Part of a silk panel
Coptic Egypt, early 8th century
AD
Probably from Akhmîm, Upper
Egypt
Used as a sleeve ornament on a
tunic
Two scenes, one a mirror image of the other,
depict a mounted emperor carrying a sceptre. They are separated by
a column of balloon-like blossoms. The emperor's rearing
horse rides over a soldier with a spear. A sense of landscape is
created with plant forms, a long-legged water bird and a bird
wearing a scarf. A woven inscription above reads Zachariou,
possibly identifying the owner of the textile workshop as a
Zacharias or Zachariah. The section above the inscriptions has a
pattern of abstract blossoms on curvilinear stems with leafy
sprigs. Strips of chandelier-shaped leaves form borders down the
sides. The silk is woven with purple and white threads in a
weft-faced compound
twill.
Several other silk
fragments with this same pattern survive, and it is likely that
many of them came from Akhmîm in Upper Egypt where a large number
of textiles were found in graves in the late nineteenth century. A
fragment in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London may be the
other half of this particular
panel.
Plain tunics were
traditionally decorated with separately woven medallions and strips
from the Late Antique period onwards. By the seventh and eighth
centuries, patterns on the highest-quality silk panels had become
extremely sophisticated and complex as here.