Jewellery and the senses: sound

Jewellery and the senses: sound

Sensory research

Jewellery and the senses: sound

Published on January 28, 2025

Ethnic jewellery is often studied for its aesthetic, symbolic, and material qualities. But there is much more to it, that is difficult to study from a book or when a jewel is lying in a museum case…and that is the sensory experiences it evokes for its wearers and the people around it. And imagine, for archaeological jewellery that is even harder, as there is no one left to ask! So, I wanted to introduce the relationship between jewellery and the senses: what did a piece of jewellery mean for its wearer? And what do we miss out as researchers and collectors, coming from another culture or timeframe? In this fourth article, we’ll look at sound.

Why study jewellery and sound?

Jewellery is not just a visual or tactile experience; it engages the sense of hearing as well. The jingling of bells, the clinking of chains, and the resonant hum of metallic discs brushing against one another are very important. They do something: they transform jewellery into an interactive and performative medium. That means that a piece of jewellery becomes much more than just a form of adornment: it is part of a living, moving cultural context. It moves along with its wearer, and it jingles!

In the Middle East and North Africa, where oral traditions, music, and rhythm are part and parcel of cultural expression, the sounds produced by jewellery play a significant role in daily life. Sound, by its very nature, requires interaction between object and wearer. Jewellery does not create sound when it’s lying around: it’s that interaction between human and thing again that makes jewellery into something more.

So that makes it a fascinating lens through which to study jewellery’s social and symbolic functions.

Sound: wearing sound in the Middle East

In many communities, jewellery that produces sound is not just a personal accessory but an extension of the wearer’s identity. The particular jingling, clinking, or ringing of a piece can make someone recognizable even before they appear in sight. If you are one of those people that loves to wear tons of jewellery, you know what I’m talking about…!

In this sense, jewellery becomes a kind of auditory signature, a way for individuals to announce their presence or movements. The tinkling sound of anklets for example would indicate to a mother where her child was playing (and all mothers know that when the sounds stops, it’s definitely time to go and check out what they’re doing!).

Wearing sound: dance

Obviously, dance provides a particularly vivid context in which jewellery’s auditory qualities come to life. The jingling of coins on belts or the clinking of bracelets creates an interplay between the dancer’s body and the ornaments they wear.

As such, they also contribute to the performance by creating an immersive sensory experience for the audience. The sound of jewellery becomes part of the rhythm, reinforcing the connection between dancer, music, and the spectators.

Wearing sound: amulets

As you know, jewellery almost always serves a protective function. And that definitely includes sound. Those small bells or coins attached to necklaces, bracelets, or anklets have as additional effect that they repel negative energies or the “evil eye.”

See more about amulets here!

Sound has the power to influence unseen forces – they will be scared off. Sound creates an audible barrier, and so you will find dangles and other jingling elements quite often in jewellery.

Jewellery and sound as a research field

Unlike visual or material qualities, sound (much like smell) is fleeting. You really need to experience jewellery in its original world, to get an idea of what its auditory capacities are. That is because jewellery is part of a living, breathing community: we often find it solitary depicted in books or showcased in exhibitions, but it is meant to move, shake and shimmy!

So how to go about that? Apart from listening to your jewellery itself, here context is everything. This is a topic where you’d need to dive into the world of everyday life: are there any references to the sound of jewellery in poetry, songs, sayings and expressions? How far does sound carry in the everyday surroundings where the jewellery was worn? Would it have been muffled by the fabric of clothing, are there occasions where sound is inappropriate? Does jewellery made of high-grade silver sound differently than jewellery of low-grade silver or base metal – can you distinguish between social statuses just by listening to the sound of jewellery…?

Jewellery never is just adornment – it is an unalienable part of its community, and that goes for its temporary capacities, too.

Jewellery and sound: an auditory world of meaning

So, by exploring the relationship between jewellery and sound, we may gain a deeper understanding of how these objects were experienced in their original contexts. It also helps us to consider what is lost when jewellery is removed from its sensory and cultural environment. That goes for all the sensory capacities of jewellery, of course, but when jewellery falls silent, we really miss out!

Read the earlier blogs on the sensory aspects of jewellery here:

Sight

Touch

Smell

Find out more about the histories behind jewellery in the e-courses!

More posts on jewellery and research? Browse them all here!

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Would you like to quote this article? Please do! Here’s how:

S. van Roode, [write the title as you see it above this post], published on the Bedouin Silver website [paste the exact link to this article], accessed on [the date you are reading this article and decided it was useful for you].

The Bedouin Silver Jewellery Blog: Sigrid van Roode

Sigrid van Roode is an archeologist, ethnographer and jewellery historian. Her main field of expertise is jewellery from North Africa and Southwest Asia, as well as archaeological and archaeological revival jewellery. She has authored several books on jewellery, and obtained her PhD at Leiden University on jewellery, informal ritual and collections. Sigrid has lectured for the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, Turquoise Mountain Jordan, and many others. She provides consultancy and research on jewellery collections for both museums and private collections, teaches courses and curates exhibitions. She is not involved in the business of buying and selling jewellery, and focuses on research, knowledge production, and education only. Sigrid strongly believes in accessibility of knowledge, and aims to provide reliable and trustworthy content: that’s why the Bedouin Silver blog provides references and citations.

Clove jewellery: fragrant necklaces in Middle Eastern & North African traditions

Clove jewellery: fragrant necklaces in Middle Eastern & North African traditions

The power of spices

Cloves in jewellery from North Africa & the Middle East

Updated September 19, 2025

Cloves are not only a spice that fills kitchens with fragrance — they have also found their way into jewellery. From Morocco to Palestine, cloves were strung into necklaces known as qiladet qrunful, worn as amulets, wedding jewellery, and telling of the intimacy between spouses. These clove necklaces are a beautiful example of how everyday materials can carry deep symbolic meaning in Middle Eastern and North African jewellery traditions, so let’s look at their use and history!

What are cloves used for in history and medicine?

Cloves were imported from India as early as the Middle Ages: in the 13th century, tax lists from the port of Aden, in Yemen, include clove as medicinal spices [1], and in Malaga, in Spain, the pharmacist Ibn al-Baitar included clove in his overview of medicinal plants, herbs and spices. [2]

The medicinal use of clove is often also based in its fragrance alone. An example from early 20th century Palestine says that if a child has diarrhoea, it needs to have a dough pie filled with mutton, onions, cinnamon, cloves and other herbs broken open above its face, so that the child may smell it. [3]

Cloves in jewellery across North Africa & the Middle East

Cloves were used in jewellery early, too. A string of cloves was excavated in Qaw el-Kebir, Egypt, and dates to the 5th – 7th century. [4] In the 10th century, Abbasid author al-Washsha described what elegant people in the city of Baghdad would wear.

“Their well-known way of dressing themselves in jewelry arranged as necklaces consists of wearing chokers with fermented cloves, long necklaces of camphor and ambergris, chains of interlaced pearls, necklaces from which hang notched boxes with amulets, others decorated with twisted ribbons of gold, or of silk woven into the form of a chain…” [5]

That is a ton of scent described right there! I liked the description of fragrant jewellery worn together with precious materials like gold and silver, because that is still very much the case in 19th and early 20th jewellery from North Africa and Southwest Asia. See for example the scented paste beads, beautifully strung with pearls and coral, in this article.

Cloves and Palestinian wedding traditions

I love how cloves signify the bond between women in Palestinian wedding traditions. Here, clove necklaces are part of wedding adornment. They are threaded onto necklaces by a double thread, that runs through both ends of the clove. To pierce the cloves, they had to be soaked in water first, and in some cases, it is said that the bride used this scented water on the day of her wedding.

Other traditions note that a Palestinian father would pay for these necklaces, both for his daughter and her female relatives and friends, as a sign of his appreciation for their friendship. That creates an entirely different level of expression and communication: that bond is emphasised by fragrance throughout the wedding ceremonies.

The close relation between cloves and weddings is visible in the memory of Wardeh, a Palestinian woman, who after her engagement went to buy cloves for necklaces, along with henna, indigo, tea herbs and amulet beads on the spice market. [6]

Cloves as amulets in Palestinian culture

Cloves were also believed to keep evil at a distance through their smell alone. [7] The necklaces worn on weddings were also powerful amulets against the Qarina, a spirit who harmed young children and expectant mothers. As such, they were worn after the wedding, too.

That use as amulet could also be achieved by simply wearing cloves in a pouch on the body, together with pepper and beads believed to ward off the evil eye. [8] These were amulets that wearers would create themselves, using supplies that were readily available in the market.

Clove jewellery as a sign of marriage and intimacy

The scent of clove has another capacity, too: it is believed to work as an aphrodisiac – something that inspires mutual attraction and sensuality. Unsurprisingly, you’ll find these in jewellery for married women – it protects from the Qarina and other jealous spirits, while also inspiring the love of a husband.

An example is the necklace above, which is from Morocco: here, the cloves were pierced lengthwise and threaded to form a ball. You’ll find cloves strung alongside coral, enameled elements and even gold throughout North Africa: they were an integral part of married life.

Clove jewellery: fleeting scent, enduring heritage

Clove jewellery may seem unusual today, but in the past it carried powerful layers of meaning. Whether protecting brides from spirits, marking a wedding bond, or simply delighting with its fragrance, the qiladet qrunful shows us how jewellery is never just adornment.

Even something as humble as a clove could become a cherished amulet or wedding necklace, woven into the cultural memory of Palestine and beyond. By looking closely at these fragrant jewels, we rediscover how symbolic and intimate jewellery traditions once were — and they continue to inspire today!

Frequently Asked Questions about clove jewellery

What is a qiladet qrunful?
A qiladet qrunful is a clove necklace traditionally worn in Palestine. It is often part of wedding jewellery and symbolises both protection and intimacy, as cloves were believed to repel spirits and carried a pleasant fragrance.

Why are cloves used in jewellery?
Cloves have long been valued for their strong scent and medicinal properties. In jewellery, they were used as amulets against harmful spirits, as well as symbols of love, fertility, and the bond between spouses.

Where is clove jewellery found?
Clove jewellery appears in North African and Middle Eastern traditions. Examples are recorded from Morocco, Palestine, and other parts of the region where cloves were imported as valuable spices.

Is clove jewellery still worn today?
While rare today, clove necklaces survive in museum collections and family heirlooms. They are an important reminder of how everyday materials like spices could carry deep symbolic meaning in jewellery.

What does clove jewellery symbolise in marriage?
In Palestinian tradition, clove necklaces were worn by brides as a sign of marriage and intimacy. The fragrance of the cloves was thought to protect the couple while also symbolising closeness and affection.


Find out more about the power of fragrance in this e-course!

More posts on jewellery and research? Browse them all here!

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References

[1] Herbal Medicine in Yemen, p. 27.

[2] Mouhajir, F. 2002. Medicinal plants used by Berber and Arab People of Morocco, PhD thesis, University of British Columbia, p. 11.

[3] British Museum, inv. no. OA.882. The string was on display in the exhibition Silk Roads in the British Museum.

[4] Granqvist, H. 1950, Child Problems Among The Arabs, p. 97

[5] Williams, E.D. 2015. Worldly Adornments: Women’s Precious Metal Jewelry in the Early Medieval Eastern Mediterranean (500-1100 CE). PhD thesis, New York University, p. 47

[6] Kawar, W.D. Threads of Identity, p. 330.

[7] Garcia Probert 2021, Exploring the Life of Amulets in Palestine, PhD-thesis Leiden University, p. 247

[7] Garcia Probert 2021, Exploring the Life of Amulets in Palestine, PhD-thesis Leiden University, p. 236

The Bedouin Silver blog gives credit where credit is due! Transparent referencing and citing sources helps us all grow. Would you like to do the same and quote this article? Here’s how:

S. van Roode, [write the title as you see it above this post], published on the Bedouin Silver website [paste the exact link to this article], accessed on [the date you are reading this article and decided it was useful for you].

The Bedouin Silver Jewellery Blog: Sigrid van Roode

Sigrid van Roode is an archeologist, ethnographer and jewellery historian. Her main field of expertise is jewellery from North Africa and Southwest Asia, as well as archaeological and archaeological revival jewellery. She has authored several books on jewellery, and obtained her PhD at Leiden University on jewellery, informal ritual and collections. Sigrid has lectured for the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, Turquoise Mountain Jordan, and many others. She provides consultancy and research on jewellery collections for both museums and private collections, teaches courses and curates exhibitions. She is not involved in the business of buying and selling jewellery, and focuses on research, knowledge production, and education only. Sigrid strongly believes in accessibility of knowledge, and aims to provide reliable and trustworthy content: that’s why the Bedouin Silver blog provides references and citations.

This blog is free: if you’d like to support independent research, please consider enrolling in a course or a jewellery talk. The proceeds directly fund my research work: thank you so much for your support!

Jewellery and the senses: smell

Jewellery and the senses: smell

Sensory research

Jewellery and the senses: smell

Published on December 13, 2024

Ethnic jewellery is often studied for its aesthetic, symbolic, and material qualities. But there is much more to it, that is difficult to study from a book or when a jewel is lying in a museum case…and that is the sensory experiences it evokes for its wearers and the people around it. And imagine, for archaeological jewellery that is even harder, as there is no one left to ask! So, I wanted to introduce the relationship between jewellery and the senses: what did a piece of jewellery mean for its wearer? And what do we miss out as researchers and collectors, coming from another culture or timeframe? In this third article, we’ll look at smell.

Why study jewellery and smell?

Smell is an incredibly powerful sense, even if it is invisible and fleeting. The perfume industry is a multi-billion-dollar industry globally, and just the simple fact that people are willing to pay for the sensation of spritzing themselves with a perfume which will inevitably dissipate, tells you something about that importance. It’s temporary, it does not last… but we do want it.

In North Africa and Southwest Asia in particular, the use of fragrant materials is part of ancient cultural, social, and religious traditions. Understanding this dimension of adornment not only enriches our appreciation of these pieces, but also offers new ways that we may look at jewellery.

So, what is it about the olfactory dimension of jewellery? How may we explore and understand something that has gone…?

Smell: scent and its significance in the Middle East

In North Africa and the Middle East, scent is more than an aesthetic pleasure; it is a vital part of daily life, social customs, and religious practices. Fragrance is considered a means of purification, an enhancer of personal allure, and a medium for spiritual connection.

The Prophet Muhammad himself is said to have cherished perfumes, and the use of scent holds an esteemed place in Islamic tradition. The Qur’an and hadiths mention the value of pleasant aromas, especially in ritual contexts such as prayer and preparation for worship.

Culturally, the importance of fragrance is inseparable from concepts of hospitality and intimacy. Homes in the Arab Peninsula are often infused with bakhoor (incense) to welcome guests, while perfumed oils are applied to skin and hair as acts of personal grooming and, again, devotion. These practices underscore a shared belief that fragrance enhances the human connection—whether between individuals, families, or the divine.

How all this works, is explained in the course on Scents in the Middle East!

Wearing scent: jewellery that smells

Jewellery often incorporates materials and designs intended to diffuse or carry scent. For example, silver amulets and pendants sometimes feature hollow compartments, or small perforated boxes. These are designed to hold scented substances such as musk, ambergris, cotton or wool infused with scented oils, or dried herbs and flowers – anything that smells! These containers allow wearers to carry a personal fragrance throughout the day, linking ornamentation to olfactory meaning.

See the meaning and importance of just one example of such a container in this article

Jewellery like this serves not only as decoration, but also as powerful amulet. The scents are believed to ward off the evil eye, a pervasive belief throughout the region. The protective power of these fragrances complements the talismanic role of the jewellery itself.

Adornment and smell: hair, body and dress

In all these contexts, the use of scent in jewellery is closely tied to other scented elements such as dress, hair, and the body itself. After all, layering perfumes was invented in the Middle East! Hair is often cared for with fragrant oils, or indeed scented paste that worked both as a haircare product and modelling agent. Remnants of these pastes can sometimes be found on hair jewellery, as I explain in more detail here.

Items of clothing can be fragranced by fumigating them with incense, and the body itself is cared for with scented oils and perfumes as well: imagine how jewellery once formed part and parcel of this fragrant aura surrounding the wearer!

Jewellery and smell: scent as a research field

So, how to use the sense of smell in jewellery research? After all, most of it is gone…the only thing that remains may be a layer of drab dark residu, or the visual indication that something may have smelled through its design, for example. There are a few ways to go about this:

Look: Awareness of this invisible capacity is key! When you are aware, or may have an inkling or idea, that cultures used fragrance and attached importance to it, actively look for this possibility, too.

Test: Residues of scented oils, resins, or powders can sometimes be detected through scientific methods. Researchers use techniques like gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) to identify organic compounds and reconstruct the original scent profile of a piece.

Compare: Examining the cultural and historical context of jewellery can provide clues about whether or not fragrance was used. By that I do not mean to simply slap a capacity of one culture onto another: that never works. What I would suggest however, is that by comparing widely, we may keep an open mind as to what possibilities exist.

Ask: Equally often overlooked, but incredibly important: just ask! Interviews with artisans and communities that still produce traditional jewellery, or that remember how a previous generation made use of this capacity, can get you invaluable insights in how scent was integrated into these pieces.

Jewellery and smell: an invisible world of meaning

Understanding the role of scent in jewellery can deepen our appreciation of the cultural significance of these pieces. Collectors, for example, could consider the olfactory history of their acquisitions as part of their storytelling value: imagine all the stories these pieces could share, about weddings and other festivities, about faith and devotion, about individual preferences and hospitality…all coming together in a piece of jewellery.

In the next installment on the sensory dimensions of jewellery, we’ll be looking at sound!

Read the earlier blogs on the sensory aspects of jewellery here:

Sight

Touch


Find out more about the histories behind jewellery in the e-courses!

More posts on jewellery and research? Browse them all here!

Join the Jewellery List and receive new articles, jewellery news and more in your inbox!

References

This blog is based on my book Silver & Frankincense – Scent and Adornment in the Arab world.

Would you like to quote this article? Please do! Here’s how:

S. van Roode, [write the title as you see it above this post], published on the Bedouin Silver website [paste the exact link to this article], accessed on [the date you are reading this article and decided it was useful for you].

The Bedouin Silver Jewellery Blog: Sigrid van Roode

Sigrid van Roode is an archeologist, ethnographer and jewellery historian. Her main field of expertise is jewellery from North Africa and Southwest Asia, as well as archaeological and archaeological revival jewellery. She has authored several books on jewellery, and obtained her PhD at Leiden University on jewellery, informal ritual and collections. Sigrid has lectured for the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, Turquoise Mountain Jordan, and many others. She provides consultancy and research on jewellery collections for both museums and private collections, teaches courses and curates exhibitions. She is not involved in the business of buying and selling jewellery, and focuses on research, knowledge production, and education only. Sigrid strongly believes in accessibility of knowledge, and aims to provide reliable and trustworthy content: that’s why the Bedouin Silver blog provides references and citations.

Jewellery and the senses: touch

Jewellery and the senses: touch

Sensory research

Jewellery and the senses: touch

Published on August 09, 2024

Ethnic jewellery is often studied for its aesthetic, symbolic, and material qualities. But there is much more to it, that is difficult to study from a book or when a jewel is lying in a museum case…and that is the sensory experiences it evokes for its wearers and the people around it. And imagine, for archaeological jewellery that is even harder, as there is no one left to ask! So, I wanted to introduce the relationship between jewellery and the senses: what did a piece of jewellery mean for its wearer? And what do we miss out as researchers and collectors, coming from another culture or timeframe? In this second article, we’ll look at touch.

Why study jewellery and touch?

Touch is an often overlooked but super significant aspect of jewellery. I mean, jewellery is literally meant to be worn on the body, and so the wearer will end up feeling it. That is where it differs from sight: sight plays with the distance between you and another person, but touch is highly personal and usually reserved for the wearer alone.

But touch is not just important for the wearers of that jewellery, but for researchers as well. The tactile qualities of jewellery play a crucial role in both their experiences and understanding. So, let’s explore the importance of touch from these two perspectives!

Touch: wearing jewellery

For wearers, the tactile properties of jewellery are integral to their personal and cultural experience. The weight, texture, and temperature of jewellery materials can evoke feelings of comfort, identity, and connection to heritage. It does something that is not always easy to put into words. And that ‘something’ is personal: of all the senses, feeling one’s jewellery is an experience for the wearer alone. Others may see, hear and even smell your jewellery, but how it feels…? That is between you and your jewellery.

Wearing jewellery: weight and presence

The weight of jewellery and other personal adornment can be a constant physical reminder of cultural identity and social status. Just one example are the coin-laden headdresses of Palestine, known as saffeh. They create a continuous sensory presence on the head, and their weight influences how the wearer carries herself.

I was allowed to wear such a headdress briefly in the home of a Palestinian collector, and the weight had a profound effect on my posture and, this may seem odd, the awareness of my own head. Feeling the headdress somehow made me feel more visible.

During that same visit, I was also dressed in a sleeveless jacket heavily decorated with coins. This was a miqlab, a bridal garment on which family would attach both coins and pieces of silver. This, too, felt heavy, and it made me think how a bride would feel in the knowledge that the weight of this garment literally embodied her own financial security and independence.

Jewellery and touch: texture

The texture of jewellery materials, whether smooth, rough, or intricately carved, provides wearers with a direct connection to the craftsmanship involved in their creation. Texture is also deliberately aimed not just at seeing, but also at wearing: the side of a jewel touching the skin is often smooth, while the exterior may be decorated in some way.

Besides wear comfort, there is also the tactile experience of feeling your jewels throughout the day. We all fumble with our necklaces, I think, and, speaking for myself at least, when someone compliments me on my necklace, I usually reach for it to feel which one I’m wearing – and I know instantly upon the touch.

It’s that sensation of textures which may reinforce the value of the jewellery, not just as an adornment but as a highly personal piece. There may be reassurance in smoothness or softness for example, something that is agreeable to the touch.

Jewellery and touch: temperature and material properties

Temperature is real! These temperature sensations change with the environment, creating a dynamic interaction between the jewellery and the wearer. There is that shiver when you put on a necklace on a cold day – but it’s gone in a few minutes. And there is the opposite, wearing metal jewellery on a hot day, when the outside of a bracelet can be too hot to touch.

Each material has its own qualities when it comes to temperature: bone, wood, glass, various metals…they all interact with the wearer in a different way.

All of this makes touch an incredibly important part of jewellery research. So how does that work?

Jewellery and touch as a research method

Engaging with jewellery through touch is vital. It may reveal so much about the materials, construction techniques, and cultural significance that might not be evident through visual inspection alone. You really need to see more than just a photo: jewellery needs to be handled. It’s by holding an object that you’ll get a better idea of its physical qualities, and from there, what does and does not work in its cultural context.

That goes for archaeological jewellery in particular: you’re usually not allowed to try a piece of jewellery on in a museum, but that is actually exactly what is needed to get how it may have been worn in the past.

Here are 3 ways touch works as a great research tool.

1 Material identification

Touching and handling jewellery can help identify materials that might be difficult to discern visually. For example, distinguishing between bone and ivory, or between glass and precious stones, often requires tactile examination (on top of tons of other methods!). The feel of the material can provide clues about its origins and the techniques used to shape it.

2 Craftsmanship and construction

By feeling the surface and construction of jewellery, you can also gain insights into the craftsmanship and techniques employed. Is it hollow or solid? Can you feel joints, or for example moving parts? That tactile experience can help reconstruct the making processes, and get an idea on how a piece of jewellery may have functioned in everyday life.

3 Wear patterns

Handling jewellery allows you to study wear patterns that indicate how pieces were used and valued. It’s those places where a bracelet or an anklet has run smooth from years of wearing, that tell you a lot about its everyday life. Usewear, as this is called, has so much to share about the jewellery’s history and the lifestyle of its wearers!

With archaeological jewellery, this is a bit more difficult, but this is where replica jewellery comes in. By wearing similar pieces, that have preferably been made in the same manner as they would have been in the past, you not only get a feel for how they may have been worn, but also on how they ‘behave’ – and end up with wear and tear.

Jewellery and touch: wearing and researching

So, as you see, both wearers and researchers experience touch in complementary ways.

For wearers, the tactile interaction with jewellery is continuous and often very personal. The feel of a necklace resting on your chest, the movement of bangles, and the weight of earrings contribute to the sensory landscape of the wearer.  It’s reassuring in some way, to feel a piece of jewellery on your skin, and you miss it when it’s not there.

Researchers approach touch with a more analytical perspective. And they do so in two ways: there is studying how touch has left traces on the object itself, to get an idea how it may have been worn. And there is handling of a piece of jewellery in turn: like I wrote above, actually handling pieces is super important!

In jewellery studies, interviews with original wearers is super important. Their tactile experiences and meanings associated with the jewellery are vital, and you’ll only understand these from actually wearing the items they’re talking about – sharing an experience.

Jewellery and touch: a highly personal aspect

By appreciating and studying the tactile aspects of ethnic jewellery, you may get that much closer to their original wearers. How does a piece of jewellery feel, how does it sit on your body, how does it interact with other items of personal adornment such as dress or hair? Touch is much more close to the skin than sight, and so touch is, in my view, a very personal aspect of jewellery.

In the next installment on the sensory dimensions of jewellery, we’ll be looking at smell!

Read the other blogs on the sensory aspects of jewellery here:

Sight

Smell

Sound


Find out more about the histories behind jewellery in the e-courses!

More posts on jewellery and research? Browse them all here!

Join the Jewellery List and receive new articles, jewellery news and more in your inbox!

References

Would you like to quote this article? Please do! Here’s how:

S. van Roode, [write the title as you see it above this post], published on the Bedouin Silver website [paste the exact link to this article], accessed on [the date you are reading this article and decided it was useful for you].

Sigrid van Roode

Sigrid van Roode is an archeologist, ethnographer and jewellery historian. Her main field of expertise is jewellery from North Africa and Southwest Asia, as well as archaeological and archaeological revival jewellery. She has authored several books on jewellery, and obtained her PhD at Leiden University on the jewellery of the Egyptian zar-ritual. Sigrid has lectured for the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, Turquoise Mountain Jordan, and many others. She provides consultancy and research on jewellery collections for both museums and private collections, teaches courses and curates exhibitions. She is not involved in the business of buying and selling jewellery, and focuses on research, knowledge production, and education only.

Textiles in Motion

Textiles in Motion

Dress research

Textiles in Motion

Published on August 08, 2024

When the study of ancient personal adornment meets lived experiences, magic happens! Textiles in Motion. Dress for Dance in the Ancient World is filled with interdisciplinary study in which ancient textiles come to life, statues swirl and the past jingles.

Textiles in Motion: the outline

This book is one of the results of a much larger project focusing on Etruscan dance through textile studies. Its contents extend wider than Etruria though, and present us with articles grouped in 6 distinct parts. First, you’ll find practical perspectives on dance and clothing, followed by Movement and Design, Embodiment and Communication, Cognition and Sensory Experience, Images and Metaphors, and even Modern Reception.

The contributions take us all over the ancient world: from the Mediterranean to China, from Bronze Age Europe to dancing Egyptologists. What will you find in this book? I’m not going to cover it all (because, spoiler alert) but will take you through my favourite chapters.

Textiles in Motion: dance in action

The first contribution, Practical perspectives on dance and clothing, is one I like best in this book. It’s written in a very approachable style, and weaves current-day dance experience together with the study of ancient textiles. I mean, even the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders make an appearance! The combination of folkloric dance experience and textile study makes this one of the most relatable and enjoyable chapters in the book. I found the notion of ‘showing off’ during dance particularly valuable –  it brings a new dynamic to the study of ancient textiles.

That is followed-up immediately by the next chapter, which introduces the design and construction of woollen skirts from eastern Central Asia. These were made some 2,000 years ago, and this chapter shows how they were actually designed to move. Through a combination of scientific research and technical recreation, these skirts were seen moving again the for the first time in millennia: a great example of how creating and wearing replicas of ancient textiles may help us understand their functionality.

That same combination of research with recreations is also what makes chapter 8 fascinating. Here, we move to Iron Age Europe, so even further back in time to around 800 – 400 BCE. Elite ladies from the Hallstatt culture in this timeframe wore jewellery that jingled, and what I found really interesting in this contribution is that the sound they produce has been analysed for its wavelength: individually and together, to create an idea of the ‘soundscape’ of these ladies.

I do wonder if that sound may have been altered slightly due to the corrosion on the jewels – I can’t quite make out if this analysis has been done with original jewels, replica jewels, or both. Either way, it’s super cool research – because it also involves reenactment of ancient dance poses by dancer dressed in replica garments and jewellery.

This way, both the movement of textile and the sounds produced could be studied. From there, further research is suggested into the ‘sound fields’ that these elite ladies emitted: could you, as an Iron Age person, judge from the specific jingle of their ornaments what status they have?

Textiles in Motion: dancing statues

Another field of study is that of 3D objects, like statues. The third chapter examines beautiful terracotta and bronze statues from ancient Greece, showing women who clearly are moving – but are they dancing, and if so, how? This chapter reads almost like a detective, piecing clues about the type of textile, how it was fastened, and which movements could may made – or not.

I also really enjoyed the elaborate discussion on Roman household gods, the lares. These gods were present in nearly every household, either in the form of little statuettes or painted on the wall. The author goes over pose, dress and personal appearance in great detail, and after reading this contribution I figured myself not much of an archaeologist – because I never realised that they, clearly, dance. How cool is that, to have dancing gods in your home? The author calls them ‘the festive guardians of the prosperity of the household’ (p.66), which is at, least to me, a new angle from which to observe these very familiar gods.

Textiles in Motion: the body, the senses, and dance

Multiple chapters discuss dance, personal appearance and the senses in Ancient Egypt. To share just one of these, the contribution on tattoos in ancient Egypt explores the relation between the body and elements of dress, the art of writing in Egypt and divine service. By considering tattoos as clothing, they gain an entirely new meaning in the context of dance: while dance is a performance that is temporal, tattoos are permanent.

Textiles in Motion – an inspiring book

This is a book about so much more than ‘just’ textiles and dance: it approaches dance in Antiquity across the full range of the senses. That is what makes it an absolutely inspiring book to me. Many of the chapters are illustrated with well-chosen images, and what I also picked up while reading this volume, was a sense of fun: in several contributions, the authors really seemed to have enjoyed what they were doing. That is usually the best way to embark on any type of research!

In combining sources such as texts, images and actual remains with sensory experiences, the past becomes a vivid place. Its interdisciplinary approach and openness to new avenues of exploration adds significantly to how we may understand movement and the senses in the past – an understanding that brings the people of that past much closer.

Whether you are into the history of dance, or an archaeologist or historian (or all of them), this is a volume I highly recommend!

More about Textiles in Motion

Textiles in Motion. Dress for Dance in the Ancient World.

Edited by Audrey Gouy (2023). 208 pages, full-colour, in English. Published by Oxbow Books: see here for more info and ordering.

I received the book as review copy.

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Sigrid van Roode

Sigrid van Roode is an archeologist, ethnographer and jewellery historian. Her main field of expertise is jewellery from North Africa and Southwest Asia, as well as archaeological and archaeological revival jewellery. She has authored several books on jewellery, and obtained her PhD at Leiden University on the jewellery of the Egyptian zar-ritual. Sigrid has lectured for the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, Turquoise Mountain Jordan, and many others. She provides consultancy and research on jewellery collections for both museums and private collections, teaches courses and curates exhibitions. She is not involved in the business of buying and selling jewellery, and focuses on research, knowledge production, and education only.