Bronze Age loom discovery at Campo Redondo reveals ancient weaving technology
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Fire Froze Time: 3,500-Year-Old Loom Rewrites Bronze Age Textile History

📅 March 26, 2026 ⏱️ 6 min read ✍️ GReverse Team
A fire 3,500 years ago torched workshops and homes at Campo Redondo in Alicante, Spain. But that same blaze did something extraordinary — it preserved one of archaeology's rarest treasures: a complete Bronze Age loom with wooden components intact. The 2026 discovery shows ancient weaving technology was far more sophisticated than previously known.
Researchers from universities in Alicante, Granada, and Valencia unearthed what might be the most complete textile production facility ever found in the Mediterranean. Their study, published in Antiquity, reveals not just loom weights but wooden elements, esparto grass ropes, and actual textile fibers — a Bronze Age weaver's workshop frozen in time.

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🔥 When Fire Becomes the Ultimate Preservationist

The blaze that hit the settlement around 1470 BCE created what researchers call a "sealed archaeological environment." Gabriel García Atiénzar, professor of Prehistory at the University of Alicante, explains the paradox: "The roof collapse was crucial — it created a sealed space where the area was suddenly destroyed and immediately buried."
Preservation Paradox: The fire that destroyed the loom simultaneously saved it. Carbonization of organic materials protected them from natural decomposition for 35 centuries.
Beneath the burned roof, archaeologists found 44 cylindrical clay weights, wooden elements from Aleppo pine, and braided esparto grass ropes. Combined analysis of these elements allowed researchers to reconstruct the loom's operation with stunning precision.

Rebuilding Ancient Technology

Ricardo Basso Rial from the University of Granada highlights this rare find: "Although the loom appeared in a destroyed state, the complex of 44 cylindrical weights with central holes characterizes a vertical loom with warp weights." The weights averaged about 200 grams — significantly lighter than the era's typical 400-900 gram weights. This difference isn't random. It points to production of finer, more refined textiles.

The Secret of Lightweight Weights

Lighter weights reveal a technological transition. With two rows of weights, weavers produced open, lightweight tabby fabrics — simple weaves similar to modern gauze. When weights were arranged in four rows, they enabled production of complex twill fabrics, denser and more durable.

🏛️ The Settlement of Technological Innovation

Campo Redondo wasn't just any settlement. It was a major regional center that flourished from 2100 to 1250 BCE. Continuous habitation and monumental construction indicate a political and economic hub in southeastern Iberia.
850 years of continuous habitation
1 hectare settlement area
44 cylindrical loom weights
Inhabitants practiced intensive agriculture and maintained extensive exchange networks. Gold and silver objects, ivory jewelry, glass beads, and marine shells testify to connections reaching central Europe.

The Golden Collection Mystery

The same site yielded the famous Villena gold treasure, dating contemporary with the loom. What was happening here? Did weaving connect to some luxury goods trade network?

🧵 The Bronze Age Textile Revolution

This discovery fits into what researchers call the "textile revolution" of European Bronze Age. It represents significant technological and economic changes in fabric production. Basso Rial explains: "The textile revolution emerged from convergence of multiple processes — expansion of livestock farming for wool production, technical innovations in looms and spinning tools, plus social changes promoting more intensive and differentiated weaving."

"This finding advances our knowledge of Bronze Age textile technology in Iberia"

— Ricardo Basso Rial, University of Granada
At Campo Redondo, these developments are reflected in new, lighter spindles and diverse loom weights. Some are light enough for producing finer, more complex fabrics like woolen twills.

From Flax to Wool

The shift from coarse flax fabrics to finer woolen textiles shows technological evolution. Weavers experimented with new fabric types, increasing both quality and diversification of produced textiles. But how do we know all this when the actual fabrics rarely survive? Usually we rely on indirect evidence from tools.

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👥 Social Organization and Labor

The context where the loom was found illuminates social organization of labor. The structure sat in an open space shared by different dwellings, suggesting collaborative production. Paula Martín de la Sierra from the University of Alicante explains: "This shows different family groups may have cooperated in activities like spinning, weaving, or grain processing." Other crafts — like metallurgy or ivory working — appear concentrated in specialized areas.

Women and Weaving

Bioanthropological evidence suggests women's central role in textile production. Various burials show women with characteristic tooth wear related to spinning activities — likely from holding fibers or cutting threads with their teeth. It's remarkable how teeth can reveal daily activities from thousands of years ago. Archaeology often surprises us with such details.

🔬 Scientific Analysis and Future Research

Archaeobotanist Yolanda Carrión from the University of Valencia conducted microscopic analysis of wooden remains. "Preservation of organic materials was enabled by fire, which carbonized the remains and limited their subsequent alteration — paradoxically destroying them while simultaneously preserving them."

Aleppo Pine

Local wood from mature large-diameter trees, carefully selected for construction

Archaeometric Analysis

Microscopic fibers and isotopic analysis of sheep bones for raw material origins

C-14 Dating

Precise dating to 1507-1428 BCE through radiocarbon dating of charcoal

Analysis revealed the loom was built from Aleppo pine, a species widespread in the region. Growth rings show wood came from mature trees with large diameters, indicating careful material selection.

The Laboratory of Tomorrow

Future research may include archaeometric analyses of microscopic fibers and isotopic analyses of sheep bones to reconstruct raw material origins and assess specialization levels in textile production. Meanwhile, the Campo Redondo loom stands as one of the most complete examples of Bronze Age textile technology in Europe.

🎯 Frequently Asked Questions

How did the loom survive 3,500 years?

Fire that destroyed the settlement carbonized organic materials, protecting them from natural decomposition. Roof collapse created a sealed space that preserved the finds.

What does the discovery prove about ancient technology?

It shows Bronze Age communities experimented with new fabric types and had more sophisticated technology than we thought. Lightweight weights enabled production of finer textiles.

What was women's role in weaving?

Bioanthropological evidence from female burials shows characteristic tooth wear from spinning activities, indicating a central role in textile production. The Campo Redondo loom discovery changes our perception of ancient technology. What seemed like destruction proved the best possible preservation method. Like Pompeii being preserved by the same volcanic eruption that destroyed it. Archaeology has these ironies. When they happen, they gift us invaluable information about how our ancestors lived. In a world where most organic materials vanish without trace, this loom is almost miraculous.

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