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  1. Feb 28, 2023 · The earliest surviving Indian cotton threads date to around 4000 BC and dyed fabrics from the region are documented as far back as 2500 BC. India’s textiles were so central to its identity abroad that in ancient Greece and Babylon the very name ‘India’ was shorthand for ‘cotton’.

  2. The textile industry in India, traditionally after agriculture, is the only industry in the country that has generated large-scale employment for both skilled and unskilled labour. The textile industry continues to be the second-largest employment generating sector in India.

  3. Apr 24, 2018 · Indian textile enjoys a rich heritage and traces its history back to the Indus valley civilization where people used homespun cotton for weaving their clothes. One of our Veda’s – the Rigveda also contains the literary information about textiles. The Indian epics Ramayana and Mahabharata even talk about the wide variety of fabrics in ancient India.

  4. indianculture.gov.in › textiles-and-fabrics-ofHistory | INDIAN CULTURE

    Textile industry became the largest industry of India under the Mughals. Gujarat, Cambay, Ahmedabad, Patan, Bengal, Kashmir, Agra, Lahore, Dhaka and Delhi were the leading centres of production.

  5. Get to know different types of woven, dyed, printed, painted and embroidered textiles of India. In this section, navigate through a map to find diverse textiles of all the Indian states. Also, find rare images and videos of Indian textiles and fabrics here.

  6. Sep 12, 2017 · The cotton industry has always occupied a honoured place in Indian industrial system. India is the accredited birthplace of cotton manufactures. Certain passages in Rig Veda, Mahabharata, Ramayana, Puranas, etc. indicate the antiquity and flourishing state of the industry from the prehistoric times (Govil 1950).

  7. India in particular was known for the quality of its textiles, and for centuries was involved in a brisk trade with Far and Southeast Asia. European companies worked their way into this commercial nexus in the early sixteenth century.