Textiles of Ireland is a landmark tapestry of textile heritage, resurrecting Irelandâs fabric history from bogs, burials, hoards and collapsed city walls. It includes discoveries ranging from a preâ800âŻBC horsehair weave to Viking-era cloth wrappings and early 20thâcentury liturgical embroidery inspired by the Book of Kells. With over 528 pages of images, charts, glossaries and field guidance, this is the first substantial archaeological textile volume since 1989, and a must-read for archaeologists, historians and anyone passionate about the threads of cultural memory.
The narrative unfolds across periodsâfrom Mesolithic to modernârevealing how linen, wool and silk articulated identity, belief and craftsmanship. Highlights include Vikingâage Dublin headcoverings (the iconic âDublin Capâ), bog-body robes, early pilgrim stoles and medieval silk fragments. Rich in technical detail yet gracefully written, the book reveals how fibre connects ecological environments, gendered labour and social hierarchies in Irelandâs material past.
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About the Author
Elizabeth Wincott Heckett was a pioneering archaeologist who dedicated over thirty years to documenting Irelandâs ancient textiles. Her researchâa blend of excavation, conservation and interpretationâintroduced the world to iconic finds such as the Dublin Cap and Viking burial clothsâŻ.
Mary Ann Williams, the bookâs editor and later contributor, is a heritage writer specialising in textile history and archaeology. She shaped this volume as both tribute and scholarshipâensuring that Heckettâs legacy is preserved in form and context.
Publication date: 2024
Publisher: Cork University Press
Pages: 528
ISBN: 9781782055716









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