November 2, 2024

Archaeologists Discover Ancient 3600-Year-Old Royal Purple Dye Workshop on Aegina Island

Archaeologists Discover Ancient 3600-Year-Old Royal Purple Dye Workshop On Aegina IslandBronze Age Purple Dye Workshop Graphic - Archaeologists Discover Ancient 3600-Year-Old Royal Purple Dye Workshop On Aegina Island
Aegina Kolonna: view of the site from the Northeast (Aegina Kolonna excavation, Department of Classics, Paris Lodron University of Salzburg). Small pictures from the left: drawing of a purple snail of the 16th c. (in S. Münster, Cosmographia, 1544), Hexaplex trunculus from Late Bronze Age Aegina Kolonna (photo by G. Forstenpointner), purple pigment sample from Aegina Kolonna (photo by L. Berger). Credit: Aegina Kolonna excavation, Department of Classics, Paris Lodron University of Salzburg, CC-BY 4.0

Ceramics, tools, and snail shells reveal insights into Mycenaean dye production in the 16th century BC.

A study recently published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE reveals that the Greek island of Aegina hosted a Late Bronze Age purple dye workshop, according to Lydia Berger from Paris Lodron University of Salzburg, Austria, and her colleagues.

Colored dyes were a significant commodity in the Mediterranean region during the Late Bronze Age, and understanding the production of these dyes was valuable for interpretations of culture and trade at the time. In this study, Berger and colleagues describe the site of a purple dye workshop from the 16th century BC located at Aegina Kolonna in the Saronic Gulf.

Evidence of Dye Production

The presence of a dye workshop at this site is inferred from three main lines of evidence: purple pigment preserved on ceramic fragments, which are likely remnants of dye containers; dyeing tools, including grinding stones and a waste pit; and crushed shells of marine snails whose bodies are harvested for these pigments. Analysis of the shells and the chemical composition of the pigments indicate that the workshop predominantly used one species of Mediterranean snail, the banded dye-murex.

Excavation at this site also uncovered many burnt bones from young mammals, mainly piglets and lambs. The authors hypothesize that these could be the remains of animals ritually sacrificed as spiritual offerings to protect the site of production, a practice known from other cultural sites, although the exact connection between these bones and the dye production is not yet fully clear.

Insights and Future Research

This site provides valuable insights into the tools and processes of Mycenaean purple dye production. Further research might reveal more information about the scale of dye production at Kolonna Aegina, the details of the on-site procedures, and the use of this dye in regional trade.

The authors add: “For the first time, the discovery of remarkable quantities of well-preserved pigment, together with a large number of crushed mollusk shells and a few functional facilities, allow a detailed insight into the production of purple-dye on the Greek island of Aegina around 3600 years ago. Chemical analysis by HPLC, malacological, zoological, and archaeological studies illustrate the technical process and peculiarities of early dye production and prove a workshop within the Late Bronze Age settlement.”

Reference: “More than just a color: Archaeological, analytical, and procedural aspects of Late Bronze Age purple-dye production at Cape Kolonna, Aegina” by Lydia Berger, Gerhard Forstenpointner, Peter Frühauf and Fabian Kanz, 12 June 2024, PLOS ONE.
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304340