This textile may be compared with another textile in the Museum’s collection (17.22.2a–d) with a very similar pattern, but incorporating metal-wrapped threads. The all-silk version would have been less expensive to manufacture, and could possibly have been a provincial imitation of textiles produced in Constantinople and Bursa. Note that the Greek letters of the inscriptions have been reversed. The size and shape of the piece suggest that it formed part of a phelonion, or chasuble.
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P3 has note |
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P138 has representation | |
P102 has title | |
is P30 transferred custody of of | |
is P106 is composed of of | |
is P41 classified of | |
is P108 has produced of | |
is P129 is about of | |
is P24 transferred title of of | |
is crmsci:O8_observed of |