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Rare Cloth Remains Found In Samdzong Tomb Complex In Nepal Reveal Silk Road Connection

MessageToEagle.com – The first results of textile and dye analyses of cloth dated between 400-650AD and recovered from Samdzong 5, in Upper Mustang, Nepal suggest that imported materials from China and India were used in combination with those locally produced.

Fine open tabby of silk Sample 50 with irregular red color. Photo credits: Margarita Gleba, Photo via The Himalayan Times

“There is no evidence for local silk production suggesting that Samdzong was inserted into the long-distance trade network of the Silk Road,” Dr Margarita Gleba of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, said in a press release.

Samdzong 5 is one of ten shaft tombs excavated by Mark Aldenderfer, (University of California Merced and Visiting Scholar at the University of Cambridge).

The probable remains of a complex decorative headware, which may have been attached to the gold/silver mask. Credits Margarita Gleba

The tombs were only exposed to view in 2009 following a seismic event that calved off the façade of the cliff, having been originally carved out in prehistory from the soft conglomerate rock of a massive cliff face.

“The data reinforce the notion that instead of being isolated and remote, Upper Mustang was once a small, but important node of a much larger network of people and places.  These textiles can further our understanding of the local textile materials and techniques, as well as the mechanisms through which various communities developed and adapted new textile technologies to fit local cultural and economical needs.”

A gold/silver mask, possibly related to the textile finds (Image: ©Mark Aldenderfer)

The cloth remains are of further significance as very few contemporary textile finds are known from Nepal.  The dry climate and high altitude of the Samdzong tomb complex, at an elevation of 4000 m, favoured the exceptional preservation of the organic materials.


Fine open tabby of silk sample with irregular red colour. Photo credit: Margarita Gleba

One of the cloth objects recovered is composed of wool fabrics to which copper, glass and cloth beads are attached.  It was found near a coffin of an adult along with a spectacular gold/silver funerary mask.

The mask has small pinholes around its edges, suggesting it had been sewn to a fabric, and probably constitutes the remains of a complex, decorative headwear.

The dye analyses were conducted by Ina Vanden Berghe at the Royal Institute for Cultural Heritage.

The full article, “Textile technology in Nepal in the 5th-7th centuries CE: the case of Samdzong” – here

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