The History of Silk, Cotton, Linen, Wool, and Other Fibrous Substances; Including Observations on Spinning, Dyeing, and Weaving.

CHAPTER XII.

Chapter 12159 wordsPublic domain

MALLOWS.

CULTIVATION AND USE OF THE MALLOW AMONG THE ANCIENTS.--TESTIMONY OF LATIN, GREEK, AND ATTIC WRITERS.

The earliest mention of Mallows is to be found in Job xxx. 4.--Varieties of the Mallow--Cultivation and use of the Mallow--Testimony of ancient authors--Papias and Isidore’s mention of Mallow cloth--Mallow cloth common in the days of Charlemagne--Mallow shawls--Mallow cloths mentioned in the Periplus as exported from India to Barygaza (Baroch)--Calidāsa the Indian dramatist, who lived in the first century B. C.--His testimony--Wallich’s (the Indian botanist) account--Mantles of woven bark, mentioned in the Sacontăla of Calidāsa--Valcălas, or Mantles of woven bark, mentioned in the Ramayana, a noted poem of ancient India--Sheets made from trees--Ctesias’ testimony--Strabo’s account--Testimony of Statius Cæcilius and Plautus, who lived 169 B. C. and 184 B. C.--Plautus’s laughable enumeration of the analogy of trades--Beauty of garments of Amorgos mentioned by Eupolis--Clearchus’s testimony--Plato mentions linen shifts--Amorgine garments first manufactured at Athens in the time of Aristophanes 191