Knitting with a Roman Dodecahedron

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  • Опубліковано 30 чер 2014
  • How to knit a glove finger with a model of a Roman Dodecahedron.
    Links:
    Martin Hallett's video: • The Roman Dodecahedron...
    Jacant's models on Shapeways, with thin walls for plastic (he also has thick-walled models to be 3D-printed in ceramic):
    small: www.shapeways.com/model/83041...
    medium: www.shapeways.com/model/20347...
    large:www.shapeways.com/model/21646...
    The scientific paper describing a dodecahedron "in situ":
    rao.revues.org/680?lang=en
    Paul Garland's photo of 4 dodecahedra at the French Museum of Antiquities in Paris. www.flickr.com/photos/paul_ga...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 505

  • @ChertineP
    @ChertineP  3 роки тому +138

    So @MakeCraftDo has made a series of 6 short videos where she makes a pair of complete gloves using a Roman Dodecahedron! I suggest y’all go check them out! The playlist is here: ua-cam.com/play/PLrcUrvayabVubi-atz0O47G2m6MjFTgQ8.html

    • @LukeyHear
      @LukeyHear Рік тому +1

      Still waiting to see a pair of gloves made with different sized fingers due to the hole sizes.

    • @garychin5321
      @garychin5321 Місяць тому

      When I first saw the Metal Roman Dodecahedron; with the Testosterone Driven "Oike"; that I am; I thought it was some sort of elaborate "Grenade" Like Weapon.....
      I could NOT be more pleasantly Surprised that it is actually a Complex Wool Hand "Glove-Maker" and Perhaps an Elaborate Chain-Making Jewellery Maker!
      Sheer Genius; considering the "Age" this Practical-Tool and Artefact was actual Developed and 'Well', Perfected.....
      I am Now in the Process of Acquiring A Plastic Replica so; that I can learn the Skills of using one....And Who knows; I can make my own Bespoke Gloves!
      I have learned about Mosaic and Roman Baths, Etc. in the Past; But this Baby takes the Full-Biscuit. 10/10!
      👍👍👍👍

  • @alejandrogorricho4791
    @alejandrogorricho4791 4 роки тому +834

    Archaeologists be like: " Is this peer reviewed tho?"

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  4 роки тому +127

      Alejandro Gorricho lol I know right? Not trying to say it WAS used by Romans at all! There is no evidence. Actually I was just trying to show it was doable, cause someone stated on that other video’s comments that it was absolutely IMPOSSIBLE! I’m just contrary that way :)

    • @libraryoflilylol199
      @libraryoflilylol199 4 роки тому +10

      Well their peers reviewed it. Doesn't that make it peer reviewed technically?

    • @punkypink83
      @punkypink83 4 роки тому +36

      lets be honest... if we can think of this use for this item now past people would have thought it too. i honestly think this is a very plausible use for the items.
      and this little demonstration is a great example of experimental archaeology :)

    • @thumbelinasmum
      @thumbelinasmum 4 роки тому +35

      This goes around every so often. There are many knitting, crocheting, and naalbinding experts among archeologists and curators. There is a thriving historical knitting community, and it has looked at this. The consensus is that this is extremely unlikely to have been the use. A simple knitting spool would be easier to use, and make better gloves, especially for beginners. Also, there is no evidence of loosely knitted gloves or any indication that anything of this sort was used. If it was it would be sort of like a party trick. Just...no.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  4 роки тому +13

      thumbelinasmum thanks for a well-reasoned and gracious reply!

  • @craigescapeddetroit5198
    @craigescapeddetroit5198 5 років тому +683

    EXCELLENT experimental demonstration. It could actually be the real purpose of these things, especially when you consider these have NEVER been found in the WARMER climates of the Roman Empire!
    These have only been found in the COLDER climate regions. If these were designed for making different sized ropes/cords, then these would be found in ALL regions of the Empire, but if they are for making knitted fingers for gloves, then it makes sense for these to be found only in the colder regions.
    This is by far, the most logical explanation for these things.
    They obviously were not made for any "tent setups" because some are as small as a golf ball, and others are the size of baseballs.
    But it makes very good sense for making children's gloves for the smaller ones and adult sized gloves for the larger ones.
    BUT, having said all that, if they were for making gloves, then I'd expect there to be MANY more of them found, simply because THOUSANDS of inhabitants would be needing a LOT of gloves for those cold months, and more than a few "knitting machines" would be needed to fulfill the demands for tens of thousands of winter gloves.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  5 років тому +140

      Craig Escaped Detroit many thanks for the kind words! Yes you are mirroring my thoughts exactly. Did I mention that over a hundred of these have been found?Of course I cannot prove that they WERE used for knitting. But what got my goat was people making fun of Martin’s attempt and saying it absolutely COULD NOT work. It’s hard to prove a broad positive statement, but it is easy to disprove a broad negative statement. You just need one counter-example.

    • @cristristam9054
      @cristristam9054 5 років тому +11

      Have you taken into consideration that the person who did this video is exhibiting confirmation bias ,and is not even addressing the fact that some of these artifacts don't even have holes ? Here is an example from a museum.
      upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cb/2018_Rheinisches_Landesmuseum_Bonn%2C_Dodekaeder_%26_Ikosaeder.jpg

    • @preshisify
      @preshisify 5 років тому +4

      thank you, any more info or articles from the archeological communities? what are their thoughts on this? everywhere I ve look so far is speculation 🤔

    • @TheloniusThorgrim
      @TheloniusThorgrim 4 роки тому +59

      @@cristristam9054 , the one without holes isn't a dodecahedron, it is a 20 sided object. Also, the knobs are notably of differing sizes on the 20 sided object. While it shares similarity in that it is a polyhedron with knobs, it is significantly different, and likely for a different purpose entirely.

    • @marcocostanza
      @marcocostanza 4 роки тому +27

      @@cristristam9054 maybe they are for different patterns and not just for gloves.

  • @jeanvignes
    @jeanvignes 3 роки тому +152

    When I was a child, my grandmother (born in 1901 in Alabama) taught me how to make lace using a technique that works in a very similar manner. She would drive small nails in a pattern around the end of an empty wooden spool (the kind used for thread) and off she'd go, twining and dropping. This clever tool does appear to work in a similar manner.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  3 роки тому +18

      Yes! “Spool-knitting”

  • @Jazzwayze
    @Jazzwayze 3 роки тому +99

    I am 82. When we were kids ( in the UK ) we used a wooden cotton reel, with panel pins hammered around the central hole. Using wool, just like this, we would weave long woolen tubes (like a pyjama cord); This was known as caulking or corking. I suppose other forms could have been woven just the same. Now that wooden cotton reels seem to have gone the way of the Dodo I imagine this 'pastime' has died out.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  3 роки тому +14

      No, it’s called spool knitting or loom knitting, and the spools or looms are available ready made at craft stores! Or on the Internet. Thank you for your account of a real folk art form!

    • @Jazzwayze
      @Jazzwayze 3 роки тому +10

      @@ChertineP Thanks. Didn't know what it is called. I just pointed out what we in the UK called it, in the Midlands! To us it was caulking or corking. Making pyjama cords!
      Someone thinks it might have been the Roman way of making rope, with bigger spheres for bigger ropes. I dunno really!

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  3 роки тому +8

      @@Jazzwayze Oh that is very interesting! I’ve been reading some books about the English Navy during the Napoleonic wars, and they always talk about the caulking coming out from between the boards, and I wondered what that was I wonder if it is this kind of knitted cordage.
      When I said, “no, it’s called spool knitting or loom knitting”, I didn’t mean to argue with you about your word for it, I meant to tell you “No, it hasn’t disappeared it’s called spool knitting now!” I really appreciate your comment! Thanks!

    • @infamyinfamy
      @infamyinfamy 6 місяців тому +5

      I'm in my 40s from the UK and we did the same thing, but we called it French Knitting. Googling it, I can see it's still a popular craft.

  • @allenhamilton6688
    @allenhamilton6688 5 років тому +1028

    Must have been galling for archaeologists when knitting enthusiasts turn their religious artifacts into glove knitting tools. LOL!

    • @forestdenizen6497
      @forestdenizen6497 4 роки тому +129

      Everything they are ignorant of is "ritualistic" or "religious", like every building with an unknown purpose is a "temple" or "tomb."
      This is presumably a result of assuming that ancient people were less intellectually developed than moderns, when the opposite is more likely.

    • @paulswan5269
      @paulswan5269 4 роки тому +58

      More ‘Gaul’ing, I’d imagine...

    • @maxwelllewis4486
      @maxwelllewis4486 4 роки тому +77

      @@forestdenizen6497 "If you don't know what it is, then it's probably 'ceremonial'"~Every archaeologist EVER.

    • @thumbelinasmum
      @thumbelinasmum 4 роки тому +39

      The ones I know are shaking their heads. There are many textile historians, experts in the various forms of handwork. They have looked at these videos, giving the makers full credit for creativity. Then shook their heads, smiled and moved on, knowing full well there isn’t a scrap of evidence for this, and a simple round knitting spool would do the same job, far more easily, faster, and yielding a better fabric. Of course knitting spools post date this era, as well. This video may fool handwork novices, and people who haven’t done any historical research, but really, it’s just made up.

    • @patriciakeadle1335
      @patriciakeadle1335 4 роки тому +1

      @@paulswan5269 Love it....Gallia est divisa in partes tres.....

  • @cyrilgigee4630
    @cyrilgigee4630 3 роки тому +180

    The Virgin Archeologists: well it's obviously a religious or astronomical artifact
    The Chad Martin and ChertineP:

    • @johnlamb7309
      @johnlamb7309 3 роки тому +9

      The Non-Virgin Archaeologists: Obviously a male fertility ritual

  • @SatelliteYL
    @SatelliteYL 2 роки тому +41

    Wow this is awesome. I can't imagine anything else this device could be used for, it has to be a knitting tool. Whoever invented this was a genius

  • @Itried20takennames
    @Itried20takennames 5 років тому +57

    Several people have asked if this makes knitting fingers for gloves easier. IMO, for a proficient knitter or crocheter, probably not. But for someone who doesn’t or barely knits this kind of loom knitting is something anyone can learn in a couple tries, and exists in many forms at your local craft store to this day. So yes, for beginners.

    • @thumbelinasmum
      @thumbelinasmum 4 роки тому +1

      A sismple

    • @thumbelinasmum
      @thumbelinasmum 4 роки тому +10

      Vidalion a simple knitting spool would work to make better gloves, for more easily than fooling with one of these. Not that there is any evidence for knitting in this period. There is naalbinding, but no knitting spools, nor writing, Noer extant examples of knitting. The history’s last knitters have looked at this, and, just, no. It’s not feasible, especially not for beginners, nor does it make decent gloves. People then were sensible enough to not spend extra time making gloves in a “party trick” way. The sides have different sized holes, but the pegs are all the same distance apart, and the holes don’t matter, only the pegs, so it makes no sense to use for different sized fingers. There is no reason suggested as to why this would be an advantage.

  • @BeerIndependence4All
    @BeerIndependence4All 7 років тому +129

    Okay, this is VERY interesting to me! I considered taking up knitting and my wife actually picked it up instead. She's a VERY good knitter and makes fingerless gloves regularly, mainly because one can still type (or knit) with them on... not because she can't do fingers. This theory makes much more sense than the "religious artifact" theory. Very condescending of modern archaeologists to automatically attribute something we don't understand to "obviously" being a religious object of some sort. I bet with practice gloves could be whipped out pretty quickly, but time will tell. Thanks for the video!!! I saw the other guy's video first, but he clearly wasn't a knitter. ;0) j/k

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  7 років тому +9

      Thanks for the good words! I'm glad you found the video helpful.

    • @verohandymike
      @verohandymike 5 років тому +4

      We still don't know what the Romans used these for. This is an interesting theory but it doesn't explain those found about the size of an egg and those almost basketball sized...the holes then are nowhere near finger-sized!

    • @VioKyuuketsuki
      @VioKyuuketsuki 5 років тому +4

      Please don't use this as ANY kind of resource for knitting knowledge. I'm not convinced this person knows a single thing about gauge and how it works. This technique would 100% result in the same sized tube from all 12 sides.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  5 років тому +4

      Michael Brown the largest is 11 cm (4.3 inches), hardly the size of a basketball.

    • @OwlTeaGames
      @OwlTeaGames 4 роки тому +2

      @@VioKyuuketsuki yeah, but if you put a stone inside the hole, it would allow you to make the tube larger. I can see it being used to sleeve all sorts of things, from gloves to actual shirtsleeves, maybe even sacks to hold certain items.

  • @wayneshingler9664
    @wayneshingler9664 2 роки тому +69

    I had the same thought about the purpose of these things when I learned of their existence. The idea that they're for knitting gloves seems consistent with their distribution. They're found in the colder parts of the former Roman Empire. Also, it could be that the reason no writers of the age bothered to mention them was because they were used for a humble task--like knitting gloves--as might be done by slaves or housewives.

    • @glossaria2
      @glossaria2 Рік тому +12

      It would also explain why the holes are in so many graduated sizes. (For differently-sized fingers and thumbs.) Unless they show up in artwork, household items do tend to be poorly documented, both for the reasons you mentioned ("women's work") and because at the time everyone KNEW what they were for.

    • @MarkusAldawn
      @MarkusAldawn Рік тому +1

      ​@@glossaria2to be fair these things are pretty nifty pieces of tech. I'm no blacksmith, but since that specific shape doesn't seem required to make gloves (if it were the only way, we would have kept using them from then til now I suppose), making something this bizarre... I'd expect blacksmiths to brag about it. "I made a hjarksgafraral hehehe" kind of thing. Even if we don't know what it was, we'd at least have a name. Unless the blacksmiths were similarly socially ignored in the places they made these.
      "Everybody knew and nobody wrote" feels more realistic, but also difficult to accept. The best I can think is those shoehorns, because the only time you're thinking about them is when you have to. Even still, if like to hope we don't forget those little things, like the shoehorn.

  • @112358dave
    @112358dave 2 роки тому +23

    This is a great demonstration of theory! Thank you for posting.
    I suspect the dodecahedron itself would look different if this were its intended purpose but you have far surpassed any theory -much less demonstration- of mine. 😃

  • @iwal1645
    @iwal1645 4 роки тому +125

    My gran use to use that to make gloves. i don't know what she called it, it was in her knitting box

    • @artificium_
      @artificium_ 4 роки тому +32

      inform the archaeologists! they think it's still a mystery

    • @kennethmccomiskie988
      @kennethmccomiskie988 4 роки тому +11

      bobbin spool.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  4 роки тому +7

      kenneth mccomiskie or knitting nancy

  • @greggv8
    @greggv8 4 роки тому +53

    How to knit the fingers together. When you have one tube finished, cast off all but two pegs. Carefully remove the tube and set it aside, with a knitting needle pokes through the last two stitches. When you're finishing the second finger, put the two unlocked stitches over two pegs for the second finger. When you cast off, the two are connected together. Repeat for two more fingers. For connecting to the thumb, is there a way to drop and cast off part of the pegs while making an extended 'tab' that's part of the tube? Still leaves knitting the rest of the glove body, or a couple of pieces of leather could be stitched together and the finger tubes stitched to it through punched holes? Wouldn't need to knit the thumb tube to the side of the index finger tube.

  •  2 роки тому +13

    First thing I thought of as soon as I saw it. For pulling the finger throught the hole, consider attaching a weight to the end of the yarn that keeps the yarn taught. My modern i cord knitting gizmo works that way.

  • @Laymans-terms
    @Laymans-terms 4 роки тому +54

    You're all wrong, we still use them today to measure spaghetti portions 😉

    • @caththomas5152
      @caththomas5152 3 місяці тому

      hahaha! spaghetti made their way from China to Italy more than thousand years later...

    • @Laymans-terms
      @Laymans-terms 3 місяці тому

      Ra-man, you're probably right 🙃 @@caththomas5152

  • @ToniMiettinen
    @ToniMiettinen 4 роки тому +15

    This is used to make a string, for example from horsehair or even thin metal wire, it is also suitable for knitting. It is a wonder that the sages of the university have not realized this, simplicity.

  • @rynneivarsson751
    @rynneivarsson751 4 роки тому +11

    I think you are onto something with the weaving... Possibly for use in making fish nets? The larger holes are used for more material/cordage/bigger nets? It somewhat fits with the geography of where they have been found.

    • @PhilRewa
      @PhilRewa 2 роки тому

      This is the best idea yet that I've heard besides the glove sewing thing

  • @almorlina
    @almorlina 7 років тому +89

    That's a perfect inner wool glove for an outer leather glove

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  7 років тому +11

      Alex Morlina good point! Thanks

    • @tallpaska5913
      @tallpaska5913 4 роки тому +1

      @@humanityandconflicts Yes, you make very long ones by cutting them in a spiral shape from a piece of thin leather.

    • @Avi2Nyan
      @Avi2Nyan 4 роки тому +1

      @@humanityandconflicts especially since bronze ones are sturdier, which is perfect for leather

  • @Kyle-gp3fd
    @Kyle-gp3fd 2 роки тому +4

    That's all the proof I need. Some kind of knitting/weaving tool was what i thought the first time I saw one.

  • @bobbycray7007
    @bobbycray7007 4 роки тому +29

    The other youtube video has a five finger version. I think once you get the hang of it you just figure out which holes you need and start knitting. The amazing thing is someone figured this out to invent it and someone figured it out when no one knew what it was for. Amazing. Makes total sense that back in the day they had plenty of time between battles or on horse back to sit there and make gloves. The coin theory doesn't seem to make sense to me bc the coins look so much larger than the holes. This has to be right.

    • @thumbelinasmum
      @thumbelinasmum 4 роки тому +6

      Really...it’s not. There is no logical reason to make a 5 stitch glove on the various sides. The knobs are all the same distance apart, but the holes are different sizes. Anyone familiar with any form of handwork can see at a glance that the different sides won’t do anything but make using it to make gloves more difficult. And not even make decent gloves. They were experts at handwork in this period. They made incredible naalbinded clothing. If they wanted to do sis thing like this, a simpler knitting spool (which the video is attempting to suggest this an “advanced” version of) would make better gloves, with less work.

    • @TeroHal
      @TeroHal 2 роки тому +1

      @@thumbelinasmum Different sides for different size fingers.

    • @thumbelinasmum
      @thumbelinasmum 2 роки тому +4

      @@TeroHal the different sides are all the same size. The diameter of the hole doesn’t affect the spacing of knobs. The knobs are what dictate the size. There is no way to make the fingers different sizes. We have evidence that during this period, they were very skilled at nalbinding. If they needed gloves, nalbinding would have provided them neat, well fitting, warm, hard wearing gloves. No one has made a single glove that meets any of these criteria, yet, using one of these little knobby things. I think they were used like dice, for gambling.

  • @patriciaelrod2430
    @patriciaelrod2430 7 років тому +18

    You almost had it. I clicked on this video to see if another crafter woman had figured out the obvious. It is not a glove maker -- it is for making cord. This is the Roman version of a spooler loom same as you find in they yarn section of any craft store. The only difference is the spooler has 4 nubs and this one has five.
    The different size holes are to accommodate different sized yarns. I made one back in the day with a large size wood spool and four nails, using a crochet hook to do the loops. I bet these items were expensive, metal was pricy back then, and perhaps given to a bride as a wedding gift.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  5 років тому +6

      Patricia Elrod sorry, I just saw this. That is not a bad theory at all! Maybe for belts, or bridle reins? Fancy ones, I mean.

    • @richardfecteau4490
      @richardfecteau4490 5 років тому +7

      why not both or maybe even more items?

    • @susantunbridge4612
      @susantunbridge4612 4 роки тому +3

      Roman soldiers were taught to do everything, so it isn't a given that it was used by women. Different sized yarns doesn't make sense, because their wool would probably be spun in a limited range of thickness. Possibly linen could have been knit on it.
      Roman soldiers probably made their own clothes. They were practical engineers, could erect a city in nothing flat, and build roads, shoe their horses, do their own saddlery, weapons, it stands to reason that they would have made their own gloves, with different sizes for different sized fingers. Perhaps braided metal wire, who knows?
      It looks like a flexible tool, could be used for making braided leather reins, or bridles - but I think the work involved in cutting leather up into tiny strips to be knit wouldn't be worth it. Knitting was supposedly begun by Arab traders, sitting on camels going through the desert, so it was a man's craft. Add to that the coastal fishermen making their own nets with some sort of knitting or knot making.

    • @willspy4u
      @willspy4u 2 роки тому +1

      @@susantunbridge4612 Nets.... fishing nets, nets to capture someone - all good ideas. Chain mail, maybe? Meaning knit protective wear. Since it was often found with money, why not a "means of exchange/trade?" Example: One medium dodecahedron = the equivalent of $50? Smaller ones were = $10. ? Also, don't discount the theory of various sized "chords/ropes;" all such things would be useful; and in different sizes.

  • @Cy55borg
    @Cy55borg 3 роки тому +15

    It reminds me of a toy I had as a kid called "Strickliesel" (knitting dolly), though that could only produce a one-size-fits-all "finger".

    • @thumbelinasmum
      @thumbelinasmum 3 роки тому +1

      This would only make once side, too, as the holes don’t matter, only the knob spacing. There is no way this can be used to make a decent glove, with only 5 stitches per finger.

  • @buutich1
    @buutich1 Рік тому +3

    I learned something called "corking" when I was a child. It consisted of an empty thread spool with 4 nails evenly spaced on one end. Then the yarn was woven around the nails. It came out the bottom as a cord which could be made into hats, slippers, mats, etc. depending on how long you made the cord.

  • @federico2893
    @federico2893 4 місяці тому +1

    signora lei e' geniale e altamente logica grazie per averci ridato una vecchia tradizione dimentocata nei secoli in italia!!!!!

  • @liviorocco7817
    @liviorocco7817 6 місяців тому +1

    Happy to see that something someone invented it, has their legacy not lost through history

  • @wpherigo1
    @wpherigo1 4 роки тому +3

    A truly excellent and insightful video! Nice work.

  • @silke4913
    @silke4913 3 роки тому +8

    I only learned of this today and it makes me so giddy to know you can use it for knitting! It makes so much sense! I really want one now as well

  • @vamboroolz1612
    @vamboroolz1612 3 місяці тому

    Yes, I agree with this. Saw the dodecahedron at the British museum years ago and gloves was the first thing I thought of.

  • @TeroHal
    @TeroHal 2 роки тому +15

    This is why when an archeologist says "It is for religious purposes", I interpret it to mean "I have no idea what it is for. I've spent my entire adult life in the university, never actually doing anything that might qualify me to know what these kind of objects would be used for".

  • @leegibson3760
    @leegibson3760 6 років тому

    Thank you for responding I plan to order one. I've tried loom knitting before this seems like a sensible use to me. I love multitools. That's what I think the dodeca are it's up to us to figure out all the uses.

  • @MichaelKerr71
    @MichaelKerr71 Рік тому +1

    I find this subject very interesting. From what I was researching knitting was invented in a certain part of the middle east within in a certain century. And that it took a long while before knitting came to Rome. And that these dodecahedrons were invented in Rome a century or so before knitting like this was invented. At anyrate, this is a facinating subject.

  • @cleverclogs2244
    @cleverclogs2244 7 років тому +68

    If these gloves were made in wool, brushed, and then felted in warm water and wood ash (while on the hands, a bit like the old shrink to fit jeans), they may have been warmer, better wearing and more comfortable.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  7 років тому +9

      Yes, I think that's a good point! Thanks!

    • @VioKyuuketsuki
      @VioKyuuketsuki 5 років тому +1

      Or if the person who made the video understood anything about how gauge works or even just how knitting worked.

    • @kayekaye251
      @kayekaye251 5 років тому +1

      That would make a much finer piece of work.

    • @ProudAnselmo
      @ProudAnselmo 4 роки тому +5

      I wish my mom was still alive so I could ask her about this. She was an archeologist who specialized in textiles and was especially interested in the contributions of women in ancient societies. She was also a knitter! I'm sure she would have had some interesting things to say about this topic.

    • @cheezorger
      @cheezorger 3 роки тому +1

      @@VioKyuuketsuki ok bro

  • @ThePointlessBox_
    @ThePointlessBox_ Місяць тому +2

    >Grabs historical artifact that thousands of archeologists cant figure out
    >makes a glove with it
    >doesnt elaborate
    based granny

  • @_..____
    @_..____ 2 роки тому +3

    Can you please continue to experient with the roman dodecahedron? Have you discover more ways to use it (e.g. knitting)? Your hypothesis is logical and practical.

  • @heartlabstudio2385
    @heartlabstudio2385 4 роки тому

    This is glorious. Crocheting hoops are great way to learn crocheting, and this is the first ever made!! ♥ Thank you for sharing this.

  • @kindateia
    @kindateia 3 роки тому +1

    I really love how she still hearts the comments

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  3 роки тому

      kinda Anastasia lol thanks! It’s my only video and I keep getting views and I wonder why and where it’s going!

    • @kindateia
      @kindateia 3 роки тому +1

      @@ChertineP someone wrote a post on tumblr about it, and people are still sharing it around the net. That's how I found it - the screenshot of it was in my Instagram recommended c:

  • @martinhallett2750
    @martinhallett2750 10 років тому +13

    Hello ChertineP. I'm amazed how good that looked. It clearly needs to be in the hands of someone who knows what they're doing. Knitting the fingers together is a bit tricky to describe but I'll try in another post. For the rest of the glove I just used the studs that went around the outside of the fingers. You have to know how much yarn to use though because you can't gauge what shape it will be until it's off so it would be trial and error at first. My video is of my first attempt so it was a bit small.

    • @martinhallett2750
      @martinhallett2750 10 років тому +10

      After knitting one finger I needed to do a kind of false cast off from the two pegs needed for the next finger so that they were free. I did this using a couple of inches of different coloured yarn so it was easy to see. I threaded it through the loops to capture the stitches but so that when I'd finished the next finger it was easy to find the loops again and put them back on the pegs. Then I could simply pull the different colour yarn out and the first finger was ready to knit again. Then I just went around the second finger a few more times so that the fingers were knitted together - the first time around you have to pull the two loops over for the shared pegs. It seemed to join well on the occasions I got it right, but there's definitely a right and a wrong way as I did get it wrong in places.
      To make the rest of the glove you just have to imagine it all laid out flat. With all fingers knitted, I used a fresh piece of yarn starting at the top peg between the little finger (pinkie in the US?) and thumb then down one vertically, anti-clockwise zig-zagging over 9 pegs. Then you need to go back up but you cant join up just yet so you have to go to the one to the right of where you started and then anticlockwise around the top. And then repeat for around 6 yards of yarn.
      I'm certain there is a right way to do it, and my way probably isn't it, but it will take some experimentation and patience to get it right. Good luck!

  • @smartsewisthandicrafts3282
    @smartsewisthandicrafts3282 5 років тому

    This is very intersting. Thanks for sharing!

  • @DivinityBleu
    @DivinityBleu Рік тому +2

    I'm pretty sure that if you look at your palm, and then look at dodecahedron, you would use the top half (evenly around like a pentagonal "circle") to cover the palm of your hand, and the bottom half evenly around to do the back portion of your hand perhaps overlapping and interlocking the stitches where they would meet around the perimeter of the center to "knit" the front and back together....or you could do it manually. I may be wrong, but I am pretty sure this would work.

  • @Thecommander248
    @Thecommander248 Рік тому +1

    Little old ladies are out here solving decade's old mysteries that has the greatest archeologists stumped.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 5 місяців тому +1

      *decades-old
      Learn to spell basic English.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 5 місяців тому +1

      No one solved anything.

  • @adamco42
    @adamco42 6 місяців тому +3

    i wish i could be there to see future historians find those circular automatic knitting looms and claim they were for "magical purposes" lollll

    • @maxwellbowman4084
      @maxwellbowman4084 4 місяці тому

      This device was not used for knitting. Knitting is a medieval invention. The fact that this person was able to knit something using it is really cool and creative, but Romans did not knit - especially in the way demonstrated here (spool knitting isn’t even until 15th century). Romans produced their textiles using weaving and Nålebinding, which are very different techniques.

  • @leewilder2896
    @leewilder2896 2 роки тому

    Here via Tom Metcalfe/Mental Floss, commenting partially for the algorithm but partially because I've never seen anyone actually demonstrate how these could be used like this before, too! I'd wondered if these were meant to be some kind of distaff core or turkish-spindle-style way of arranging a ball of yarn as it was spun, given one was found as part of a woman's grave goods with what I've seen described as "an ivory staff" very nearby, but this is a pretty solid argument for ancient Roman knitting techniques. Thank you!

  • @ionicduckling8617
    @ionicduckling8617 3 роки тому +10

    Instead of taking the "fingers" off the dodecahedron why not stitch them together while they are on their still, you would only have to stitch the back hand side of the glove on. you could make it adjustable. Just curious if that would work?

    • @SeraliaAerials
      @SeraliaAerials 3 роки тому +2

      That’s a super interesting idea, I’m planning on trying to get my hands on one in the future so I’ll have to keep this in mind and try it.

    • @colinellis9063
      @colinellis9063 2 роки тому

      I was going to say the same and thought I'd just check down the comments to make sure I wasn't repeating.

    • @colinellis9063
      @colinellis9063 2 роки тому +1

      And even knit a hand part around them all.

  • @jacobonline6994
    @jacobonline6994 9 місяців тому +1

    The simplest explanation is usually the correct one

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 5 місяців тому +3

      What is the simplest explanation for these, though?

    • @maxwellbowman4084
      @maxwellbowman4084 4 місяці тому +1

      Romans using this to knit would not be the simplest explanation - knitting was not practiced in Ancient Rome. Knitting is a medieval invention.

  • @artemirrlazaris7406
    @artemirrlazaris7406 Рік тому +1

    I was looking for aplce when this Roman dodecahedron shape came into my view. My intution says in my mind that its for sewing, hanging like a toggle, it has multiple uses, but sewing is hte main thing to slide toggles for like orman blinds, something to do with toggles, under naalysis your glove makes sense the extra ball nubs would allow for joint/ and knuckle tying.

  • @rotorkiteman
    @rotorkiteman Рік тому +2

    Not a believer. Five stitches around any finger makes a very open glove- worse on big fingers. A knitting Nancy is easy to make from wood and quite functional, flat, and easier to carry. Making one of these on a forge is a serious undertaking. I've tried it. Whatever they were they had to either handle a great amount of force, or were a powerful symbol of the metal worker's ability. I've been working on the puzzle for 50 years. Had one on my desk at work for 30 years sounding out anybody who would discuss them. I'm a serious engineer and love a good puzzle.

  • @conifergreen2
    @conifergreen2 2 роки тому

    I thought it was used for knitting too. Are there any original Roman clothes or textiles that appear to be made this way? When I was a child my friends mother got us into corking knitting so it appears similar

  • @frank124c
    @frank124c 3 роки тому +11

    Maybe the reason this device was found in northern countries was because gloves were needed mostly in such areas. Maybe it was a do it yourself knitting device, maybe the Roman army didn't supply gloves and so the Romans needed something to help them make their own.

  • @Ritercrazy
    @Ritercrazy 5 років тому +1

    Lovely work.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  4 роки тому

      Ritercrazy many thanks! Sorry I just now saw this.

  • @menachemsachemrobotscowitz2794
    @menachemsachemrobotscowitz2794 27 днів тому

    Educational. Thanks for sharing.

  • @fennecweb
    @fennecweb 3 роки тому +3

    is the distance between the pegs the same for each side? if it's supposed to be for knitting, why would there only be about 200 of them and only in one section of the world? hmm...

  • @doughnut1107
    @doughnut1107 6 місяців тому

    Thank you for the video

  • @palokros3752
    @palokros3752 2 роки тому +1

    Not a mystery - going along the edges, we have to traverse the vertices of the dodecahedron so that we pass through each vertex only once returning to the vertex we departed. All peaks must be touched. The traversal of the vertices in the Roman logic game can be guided using a piece of thread, fixing it to the small spheres at the vertices of the dodecahedron to mark the path. (kind of Ancient Rubik's Cube, a logical game of the Romans). Hamilton-path, Graph Theory, Discrete Mathematics. Naturally, the design cast in bronze was a luxury item, common version was carved in wood and a nail driven into each vertex guiding the thread.

  • @pietrosal9629
    @pietrosal9629 6 місяців тому +4

    I highly reckon this was its actual purpose in the main.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 5 місяців тому +1

      What?

    • @maxwellbowman4084
      @maxwellbowman4084 4 місяці тому

      Knitting was not invented until the Middle Ages. This is cool and creative, but Romans did not knit.

  • @pvoneber
    @pvoneber 6 років тому +10

    Not sure if this is originally for knitting. It looks more like a connecting piece to mount military tents. The holes take wooden sticks to build the tent structure from the center and get the shape and height of the tent. The little fixing points allow to fix the tent tissue on the centered structure to avoid the tissue flying away (wind), keeping it in the exact position. The metal structure underlines a mounting purpose.
    ..and appearantly it can also be used for knitting... some kind of "ancient leatherman"

    • @kc-tk9tv
      @kc-tk9tv 6 років тому +9

      a quick search would show that we pretty much know how the tents were built and with what tools,plus with the numbers needed for an encampment i'm sure more would have been found.

    • @richardfecteau4490
      @richardfecteau4490 5 років тому +3

      these are found where you would want gloves for sure. they aren't found everywhere you would want a tent.

    • @allenhamilton6688
      @allenhamilton6688 5 років тому +4

      If it was used for tents I think many more would have been found. I'm sticking with the glove theory.

  • @pragmaticjim
    @pragmaticjim 2 роки тому +3

    I'm not a knitter, but it seems to me that the size of the finger tube would be set by the number of stitches in the circle, and 6 sides is always going to end up with essentially the same size tube if you use the same size yarn and same stitch.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  Рік тому

      When I was a kid there was a toy. It was a tube woven of flexible fibers that we called a “Chinese finger trap”. Pulling on it caused the tube to contract in diameter until you couldn’t get your fingers out. This is how drawing a knitted tube through a smaller hole would work.

  • @owenswabi
    @owenswabi 4 роки тому

    That’s so awesome

  • @barrettbarker8343
    @barrettbarker8343 5 років тому +1

    I saw this from Mysteries at the Museum on the Travel Channel. Cool to see how it works, good video!

  • @vec3038
    @vec3038 Рік тому

    Very cool video!

  • @moonstone1573
    @moonstone1573 3 роки тому +2

    I still don’t understand how the size of the holes effects the size of the glove fingers. It’s the knobs that determine the size. So what’s the point?
    Or is it a place holder so you know what finger you are working on?

    • @maxwellbowman4084
      @maxwellbowman4084 4 місяці тому

      It wasn’t used for knitting. Knitting was not invented until the Middle Ages.

  • @rickkirby6856
    @rickkirby6856 4 місяці тому

    Brilliant!

  • @1viva
    @1viva 7 років тому +1

    That was interesting. Thank you!

    • @1viva
      @1viva 4 роки тому

      :-)

  • @mrswilliamstoyou3325
    @mrswilliamstoyou3325 9 місяців тому +1

    THE HISTORY CHANNEL CALLED IT A SURVEYING TOOL, LMFAO!! I NEARLY FAINTED.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 5 місяців тому +1

      We don't know what it was.
      So?
      Why do you consider their explanation stupider than this one?

    • @zackakai5173
      @zackakai5173 4 місяці тому

      @@frontenac5083 presumably the History Channel (which admittedly is a pretty dreadful source of information for anything historical/archeological) told them it was a surveying tool, and a friendly-looking person on UA-cam showed them a nice video where they used it to knit something.
      Course the reality is neither of those things is a credible source if we're talking historical information.

  • @The.Nerdy.Ninja-TB
    @The.Nerdy.Ninja-TB 6 місяців тому

    Okay this amazing!!!

  • @Rog.Tiks._
    @Rog.Tiks._ 3 місяці тому

    Esto es gracioso Y me encanta. 😁 Buen uso de la imaginación.

  • @avideorecord3585
    @avideorecord3585 2 місяці тому

    It’s used for navigating at night using the stars. Alight with Sirius and with the circles, you can find your latitude and longitude.

  • @wpherigo1
    @wpherigo1 10 років тому +3

    Nice knitting! Great video! What did you shoot that with? Is it a Nikon D90?

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  10 років тому +2

      Wouldn't you like to know, Mr. Pherigo!

  • @paietynb.2690
    @paietynb.2690 3 роки тому +1

    May I ask where you bought that? I wouldn’t mind trying my hand at it

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  3 роки тому +1

      At Shapeways.com. See the links in the description. Thanks!

  • @RsRj-qd2cg
    @RsRj-qd2cg 2 роки тому +4

    Archaeologists of the future are probably going to think fidget spinners were weapons or religious symbols.

  • @MisterMsk
    @MisterMsk 8 років тому +4

    Have you made gloves before? How was using this device to make the fingers? Did it require less effort to keep the roundness of the finger then anything else you used? Also, after trial and error, did it speed the process up? BTW, thank you so much for your video. Don't get me wrong, I like the video TheMartinhallett did, but I see that experience really pays off.

    • @julianocamargo6674
      @julianocamargo6674 8 років тому +2

      That is the fundamental question, does it make easier or not?
      It should be a very expensive tool back then.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  7 років тому +3

      Sorry, I just saw this! I have made several pairs of gloves and mittens before using short double pointed needles. The fingers are always round either way you knit them because they are knit round and round, and also your finger is round too so that keeps them round in shape.
      It's anachronistic to compare to knitting with needles; the experts say there is no evidence of knitting needles from this time, so i don't think people had the choice. Also, most knitters consider this method more primitive than knitting with needles; you can't do as much with spool knitting as you can with needles.

    • @preshisify
      @preshisify 5 років тому

      🤔

  • @shankar-pandiath
    @shankar-pandiath 25 днів тому

    Awesome...

  • @ciscodealmeida8541
    @ciscodealmeida8541 2 роки тому

    thank you

  • @leegibson3760
    @leegibson3760 6 років тому

    Very interesting I keep trying to hear where you purchased the item but I don't understand what you said.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  6 років тому

      Thanks, Lee. The website is called Shapeways.com. They will 3D print any object and send it to you, if the design is on their website. Look in the description box below the video for the links.

  • @termination9353
    @termination9353 4 роки тому +1

    The Bronze Dodecahedrons are mass produced toy brainteasers similar to Rubics Cube. Each face had a five sided chip with symbols or some such that pivoted round the axis of each hole the idea being to match up the symbol of one side of the chips face with same symbol of neighboring chip face, all faces ending up having matching symbols on all sides. Different size holes as 'color coding' so MASS manufacture can know which chip goes into which face of the dodecahedron. Each axle was cotter-pinned from inside or more likely 'peened' mushroomed hammered accessing from opposite end hole. Final piece held in place by offset tab through keyhole hole. (various size holes also allows for use of axle material that comes in non uniform diameters [as harvested].) - In the end like in modern times, most of them got trashed after getting bored with and recycled for their bronze and those that didn't get recycled over time the biodegradable parts dissolved away leaving the bronze skeleton.

    • @PhilRewa
      @PhilRewa 2 роки тому

      Just a guess or where are you getting this from?

    • @termination9353
      @termination9353 2 роки тому

      @@PhilRewa From my own deductive reasoning.

    • @aperson325
      @aperson325 7 місяців тому

      That doesn’t explain why they were only found in the north though

    • @termination9353
      @termination9353 7 місяців тому

      @@aperson325 The question is What are they. The question is NOT why in the north. Asked and answered.

  • @marlenecheladyn6450
    @marlenecheladyn6450 6 місяців тому

    I remember doing something similar with an empty wooden spool, 4 nails, a needle and yarn. Wrap the yarn to the outside of that ball, lift the stitch up and over the yarn. Much faster.

  • @docholiday7975
    @docholiday7975 Рік тому +2

    It's a quaint theory, but it doesn't line up with the archaeology.
    From about ~6500 BCE, through the Roman period and up to ~1000 CE, naalbinding was the sole form of knitting. It uses completely different stitches and forming a tube isn't difficult since it starts off in the round anyways (you have to double back on yourself if you want a flat length like a scarf). The notion of distribution patterns neither works since quite a few pieces of what has been preserved are from Egypt and the Levant, including one letter from a soldiers in Alexandria requesting socks the same as in Vindolanda; turns out people like socks irregardless of where they're from.
    Great idea if you want to use it for knitting, but so far as a historical use is concerned it holds a much water as a colander

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  Рік тому

      I totally agree with you. I have no evidence that it was used this way in that time. What got me going were the arguments stating categorically that it *could not* be used this way. (This was in the comments to Martin Hallett’s video -see description below my video) It’s easy to disprove a blanket statement like that. So I did. Thanks for your subtle, well-reasoned comment!

  • @talismanskulls2857
    @talismanskulls2857 4 місяці тому

    One of the things forgotten is some of these also had wax on them which would be used in weaving, not knitting per se. Such textiles have been found dating back to at the very least 1500 BCE and would be made of untreated natural wool fibers between 1-2 mm and the wax made from animal fats and bee hives would have helped keep the woolen yarn fibers uniform and reduced friction. The groves are missing on this example and where there to help prevent slipping between the nodes on the edges. They were not Roman.

  • @_milkysoup
    @_milkysoup Рік тому

    Could the thingy be used to make flat ”patches”? To be stitched together and create the rest of the glove? I saw some without holes and thought maybe their purpose was making flat objects

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  Рік тому +1

      I don’t know. The ones you saw without holes are probably icosahedrons, not dodecahedrons. If you’re familiar gaming dice, those were D20s and these are D12s.

    • @_milkysoup
      @_milkysoup Рік тому

      @@ChertineP Amazing that you’re still answering comments, and quickly at that 😄
      I don’t think the ones I saw were dice tho.. They still had the pegs and sides with holes but also sides with no holes, flat between the pegs.
      Watching your video made me think if it was possible to secure the knitting in the stage before it becomes a cylinder (2:40 in your video) it would create patches that could then in theory have been stitched together to finish off the glove.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  Рік тому

      @@_milkysoup I’d love to see a picture of the one you’re talking about. As far as answering comments, I only have 1 video, so it’s not too difficult!

  • @matty101yttam
    @matty101yttam 3 місяці тому

    Roman: "....why are they knitting with one of our multi-size cupholders?"

  • @matilda8983
    @matilda8983 3 місяці тому

    Toll! Dankeschön ❤

  • @brentrichards2501
    @brentrichards2501 4 роки тому

    That is one way of looking at it. It all depends on who you are and how you think. It could be the first Magic 8 ball, Metal Lego piece, floating Phantasm spike ball, staff head piece, different types of jewels to add then roll like dice, weapon, pet toy, mathematics calculator, puzzle, creates a black hole or just a piece of metal that someone made artwork to express themself.

  • @alohathaxted
    @alohathaxted 3 роки тому +1

    Since many were found with Roman coins I’m wondering, if this wasn’t a coin gauge. To count coins by size and stacking within the same size space or to check coins for counterfeit coinage.
    Were the Roman soldiers paid in coin? Image the pay master with stacks of coins of varying denominations. He quickly can grab the amount that each grade of soldier is paid and slide it across the table into each soldiers hand or purse without counting and the soldier can see he is not being cheated and they can quickly move onto the next soldiers pay. Like a calculator or abacus.

    • @allisonmarciszyn8716
      @allisonmarciszyn8716 2 роки тому

      Now this is an interesting idea. Maybe this was for making coin rolls? The knitting/net fabric held the coins together, the gauged holes only allowed the proper coins through?

  • @dotdedo
    @dotdedo 3 місяці тому

    The first time I saw one of these was in a meme about how we have no idea what these are. I took one look and thought “I bet it’s for knitting” it looks like a super complex version of my moms crochet tools

  • @TheKsourmoon
    @TheKsourmoon 4 місяці тому

    Hi, you might have a better chance of using smaller yarn, wursted weight or smaller. I've purchased a few of them. Also found that pulling over from the outside in makes an very fun unique pattern

  • @MB-st7be
    @MB-st7be 4 роки тому +2

    So why does it have 12 sides when you only need one side to knit? I don't think it's a Roman glove knitter.

  • @ningsihturner8653
    @ningsihturner8653 4 місяці тому

    I received my order of large dodecahedron, but I think they sent me a small one? Please s your the photo

  • @onememeboi7379
    @onememeboi7379 4 роки тому +5

    To make a different size gloves shouldn't the post be spaced differently. Using this aren't you just pulling the same size finger through different size holes?

    • @elenas6304
      @elenas6304 4 роки тому +1

      lol yes.

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  4 роки тому +1

      Yes you are, but the point is, it works. This is a very primitive form of knitting, and doesn’t make sense to us because we know about knitting with needles, a much later invention. Anyway I just did it to prove it CAN be done, because a commenter on another channel was screaming that it absolutely wouldn’t work. Thank you for commenting!

  • @scottrauth8219
    @scottrauth8219 3 роки тому

    Good vid!

  • @victoriajankowski1197
    @victoriajankowski1197 2 роки тому

    And wool would felt over time, so the 'holes' would not be a problem, either additional processing after completion or a 'break in' period

  • @dongiovanni4331
    @dongiovanni4331 4 роки тому

    Could they have knitted a flat piece a little more than twice a palm length that you folded over the outside of the palm, then joined into a tube at the thumb, then closed as one attaches each finger?

    • @ChertineP
      @ChertineP  4 роки тому

      Sure, if they had needles.

  • @jthepickle7
    @jthepickle7 2 роки тому

    For knitting bow string?

  • @kennethmccomiskie988
    @kennethmccomiskie988 7 років тому +19

    could be for making rope each size fits into one another.

  • @rosscairns1020
    @rosscairns1020 6 місяців тому +1

    I have came from far across the Internet to pay homage.

  • @ValB.
    @ValB. Рік тому

    Nice great video, also merry Christmas (just a bit late)

  • @emilyi771
    @emilyi771 2 роки тому

    Maybe they had several purposes, including this one. How did anyone thing of this? Amazing.

  • @Zeoinx69
    @Zeoinx69 3 роки тому +1

    I would not be suprised if this was the thing, I was reading an article about these today, and was like "Did anyone ever try to use this as a crafting thing. I didnt think this was called Kniting, but i remember having a block of wood with 4 - 5 nails in it on the top, and a hole between them going down. and i would create something similar using similar method,

  • @matthewkyle205
    @matthewkyle205 2 місяці тому

    no hooks have been found ?

  • @jasonsmith2435
    @jasonsmith2435 4 місяці тому

    most likley for gloves or different size ropes

  • @carnbyarst670
    @carnbyarst670 17 днів тому

    If it's for knitting gloves why has it twelve sides when ten will do, or even five?