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    Home » Wooden Loom Preserved By Fire 3,500 Years Ago Now Reveals Bronze Age Textile Revolution
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    Wooden Loom Preserved By Fire 3,500 Years Ago Now Reveals Bronze Age Textile Revolution

    TECHBy TECHApril 5, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Wooden Loom Preserved By Fire 3,500 Years Ago Now Reveals Bronze Age Textile Revolution
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    Recreation of textile co-op at Cabezo Redondo settlement in the Bronze Age Credit: J. A. López Padilla; Reconstruction of a Bronze Age loom by Beate Schneider, on display at the Alcoy Archaeological Museum via University of Alicante

    A wooden loom that survived a devastating fire 3,500 years ago has revealed key aspects of the Bronze Age textile revolution.

    Most of the weights as well as components made from wood and plant fibers remained remarkably intact despite the blaze that burned down a settlement near Villena in present day Spain.

    Scientists explained that the same inferno that destroyed part of the ancient village of Cabezo Redondo also helped preserve the loom that they say is “incredibly hard” to document in archaeology.

    The discovery by a team of Spanish researchers is one of just a few known cases in which both the set of loom weights and components have been preserved.

    Describing their research in the journal Antiquity, the team says that Cabezo Redondo was a major Bronze Age settlement between 2100 BC and 1250 BC, which included terraces on the slope of the hill, with workbenches, fireplaces, silos, and storage receptacles.

    The economy was based on intensive farming, so the discovery of gold, silver and ivory ornaments, as well as glass and seashell beads, proved that the settlement was part of a large exchange network connected to other areas of the Iberian Peninsula, the Eastern Mediterranean, and even Central Europe.

    Study co-author Professor Gabriel García Atiénzar, of the University of Alicante, explained that the fire generated a very specific archaeological situation and the collapse of the ceiling was crucial: “resulting in a sealed space in which the area was suddenly destroyed and immediately buried, enabling its preservation.”

    The loom’s components – including charred timbers, clay weights and esparto ropes – were preserved beneath the remains of the collapsed ceiling.

    3,500-year-old loom with wooden weights in Cabezo Redondo settlement – University of Alicante / SWNS

    The loom was revealed during excavation on the western slope of the settlement, where the researchers found a raised platform with a dense concentration of clay weights. The evidence allowed the team to identify the device with a high degree of certainty.

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    “Although the loom was recovered from a collapsed area and some pieces were missing, the compact set of 44 cylindrical weights with a central perforation, most of them about 200 grams in weight, is characteristic of a vertical warp-weighted loom,” said Ricardo Basso Rial, a predoctoral researcher at the University of Granada.

    “Several pine timbers in a parallel arrangement were discovered alongside the weights.

    “Some of the thicker timbers, with a rectangular cross-section, are probably the remains of the upright posts of the loom frame; other narrower pieces, with a rounded cross-section, supposedly constitute the horizontal posts.”

    The researchers also identified plaited esparto fibers associated with the structure, and even remains of small cords in the perforations of some weights, probably used to “warp” the threads to each loom weight.

    Archeo-botanist Yolanda Carrión, from the University of Valencia, analyzed the wooden pieces.

    “The preservation of the organic elements was due to the fire that charred the remains and to the fact that these remains were practically unaltered later,” she said.

    “Paradoxically, the fire both destroyed and preserved the site.”

    Reconstruction of Bronze Age loom by Beate Schneider, on display at the Alcoy Archaeological Museum via SWNS

    A microscopic study of the wood determined it was made from Aleppo pine, widely found in the surrounding area.

    “The observation of the growth rings suggests that the timbers came from long-lived trees that provided large-diameter pieces of wood, which indicates that the material was carefully selected,” said Carrión.

    The ‘textile revolution’

    The loom was part of a wider period known as the “textile revolution” in the European Bronze Age—characterized by technological and economic changes in production, according to the study.

    “The textile revolution was the result of a combination of processes, including the expansion of livestock breeding for wool production, technical innovations in looms and spinning and weaving tools, and social changes that led to more intensive and diversified textile production.”

    He says new forms of lighter spindle whorls and various types of loom weights, some of them lightweight enough to allow for the production of finer, more complex fabrics, such as twills, were present at Cabezo Redondo.

    Fabrics themselves are rarely preserved in archaeological settings, so deductions need to be based on the study of tools. For that reason, the researchers say the loom recovered from Cabezo Redondo is especially valuable.

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    It allows scientists to “go from interpreting isolated loom weights to documenting a working loom with extreme detail: the wooden structure, the ropes, the weights and the architectural context.”

    Part of a co-op

    It was located in an outdoor space shared by several households, which suggests that production was a “cooperative” effort.

    “This indicates that different household groups may have collaborated on activities such as spinning, weaving and milling,” said Paula Martín de la Sierra, a predoctoral researcher at the University of Alicante.

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    “Other artisanal activities in the village, such as metalwork or ivory craftsmanship, seem to have been concentrated in specialized areas.

    “In several graves at the site, teeth recovered from female remains have a degree of wear characteristically associated with spinning and weaving, as these women probably used their incisors to hold fibers in place or cut threads.”

    age Bronze fire loom Preserved Reveals Revolution Textile Wooden Years
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