Spinning
The notices of spinning in the Bible are confined to (Exodus 35:25,26; Proverbs 31:19; Matthew 6:28) The latter passage implies (according to the Authorized Version) the use of the same instruments which have been in vogue
for hand-spinning down to the present day, viz. the distaff and spindle. The distaff however, appears to have been dispensed
with, and the term so rendered means the spindle itself, while that rendered “spindle” represents the whirl of the spindle,
a button of circular rim which was affixed to it, and gave steadiness to its circular motion. The “whirl” of the Syrian women
was made of amber in the time of Pliny. The spindle was held perpendicularly in the one hand, while the other was employed
in drawing out the thread. Spinning was the business of women, both among the Jews and for the most part among the Egyptians.