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  1. Grace Mary Crowfoot ( née Hood; 1879–1957) was a British archaeologist and a pioneer in the study of archaeological textiles. [1] During a long and active life Molly—as she was always known to friends, family and close colleagues—worked on a wide variety of textiles from North Africa, the Middle East, Europe and the British Isles.

  2. 5 de out. de 2016 · Grace Mary Crowfoot was an English scholar who published numerous articles and books about European and Middle Eastern textiles and textile production. She is regarded as one of the Grandes Dames of the study of archaeological textiles.

  3. Grace Mary Crowfoot (1877-1957) by Elizabeth Crowfoot. My mother, Grace Mary Hood--Molly to her family and friends--was born in1877, eldest child of Sinclair and Grace Hood, in Nettleham Hall, in Lincolnshire. Her father's family were originally Scottish, and claimed descent from a Colonel John Hood, who came south with General Monck's army in ...

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  4. Grace Mary Crowfoot, botanist, textile historian, archaeologist, and midwife, was the mother of Nobel Laureate Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910-1994), who was only the third female after Marie Curie and Curie’s daughter Irène Joliot-Curie to win the Nobel Prize for Chemistry.

    • Heather J. Sharkey
    • 2016
  5. Two weeks before the opening of the TRC exhibition about hand looms and textiles, in May 2014, the TRC was given an unique and historical collection of spinning and weaving equipment that was originally gathered and used by the British textile historian, Grace Mary Crowfoot, between 1909 and 1937.

  6. Introducing Grace Mary Crowfoot and Making a Case for Intimate Exchanges 1 Grace Mary Crowfoot (1877-1957) –known as Molly to her friends –was a botanist, archaeologist, textile historian, and trained midwife.

  7. 5 de set. de 2022 · Abstract. This paper explores the Grace Mary Crowfoot collection of textile objects and letters found in the Textile Research Centre (TRC) in Leiden. Crowfoot, a textile archeologist worked mainly between North Africa and the Middle East, although her interests were far more expansive. Her collection in the TRC has largely gone unstudied.