Page 55 - J. C. Turner "History and Science of Knots"
P. 55

CHAPTER 4

                  ANCIENT EGYPTIAN ROPE AND KNOTS



                                Willemina Wendrich




       Introduction

       Rope making and knotting were perhaps the first techniques available to early
       man. Before man knew how to make pots or stone knives, he would have used
       organic materials, such as wood, twigs, grasses and leaves. Knotting would
       be necessary to connect wooden posts for making shelters. In many areas of
       the world those shelters were probably made of matting, plant stems or twigs
       tied with strings to form the sides and roof. For basket making, which was
       a human invention pre-dating pottery, the same materials were used as for
       rope making and knotting. Because stone and pottery survives to a much
       greater extent in the archaeological context than organic materials, our image
       of ancient cultures is undoubtedly lopsided: stone-age man did of course use
       stone tools, but in daily life the use of organic materials must have been even
       more important than the use of stone objects. `Basket-age' would probably
       be a better modifier than stone-age, to indicate the most important artefacts
       of that period. On the other hand, the indication `basket-age' is valid for the
       most part of human history, with the exception of the last 40 years of our
       history, in which the use of plastic is taking over rapidly the niche of basketry.
           In Egypt, archaeologists are in a favourable position to catch a glimpse of
       the importance of organic materials in daily life. Because rainfall is extremely
       limited in large parts of the country, the preservation of rope, basketry, tex-
       tiles and leather is extremely good. Until a decade ago, excavators have failed
       to pay systematic attention to these materials, probably because their atten-
       tion was focussed on pottery and written material. Furthermore, Egyptology
       traditionally concentrated on palaces, temples, tombs and (religious) inscrip-


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