Page:Textile fabrics; a descriptive catalogue of the collection of church-vestments, dresses, silk stuffs, needle-work and tapestries, forming that section of the Museum (IA textilefabricsde00soutrich).pdf/335

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with the ground. Sicilian, 13th century. 15 inches by 8 inches.


Like the specimen under No. 1274, where it is fully described.


7050.

Silk Damask; all creamy white; pattern, net-work, the oval meshes of which show floriations in thin lines upon a satiny ground. Syrian, 13th century. 11-1/2 inches by 6 inches.


This fine rich textile is, in all probability, the production of a Saracenic loom, and from the eastern part of the Mediterranean.


7051.

Silk Tissue; ground, amber; pattern, a reticulation, each six-sided mesh filled in with alternate flowers and leaves, with here and there a circle enclosing a pair of parrots, addorsed, regardant; and between them a lace sort of column having, at top, a crescent all in dark blue. Oriental, late 12th century. 12-1/2 inches by 6-1/2 inches.


A good specimen, when fresh and new, of the eastern loom.


7052.

White Silk Damask, diapered with a chequer charged with lozenges, bearing the Greek gammadion, and sprinkled with larger flowers. Oriental, 14th century. 7-1/2 inches by 5-1/2 inches.


The pattern of this curious stuff is very small; and from the presence of the gammadion upon it, we may presume it was originally wrought for Greek liturgical use, somewhere on the coast of Syria.