Cotton growing, for article on cotton cultivation

Cotton cultivation takes root independently across multiple ancient civilizations

Around 3000 B.C.E., something remarkable was already well underway on several continents at once. Farmers in what is now Mexico, in the Indus Valley, and in the Nile region had each, independently, learned to cultivate a wild shrub, coax its fluffy seed-hair into fiber, and spin it into cloth. No single civilization invented cotton. Several did — separated by thousands of miles and with no apparent contact.

What the evidence shows

  • Cotton cultivation: The oldest known cotton fabric comes from Huaca Prieta in Peru, dated to roughly 6000 B.C.E. — making the Americas among the earliest sites of cotton use anywhere on Earth.
  • Independent domestication: Ancient peoples in Peru, Mexico, the Indus Valley (modern-day Pakistan), eastern Sudan, and the Jordan Valley all developed cotton separately, using strikingly similar tools: combs, hand spindles, and primitive looms.
  • Early cotton fiber: Mineralized cotton threads found at Mehrgarh, in present-day Pakistan, date to the first half of the 6th millennium B.C.E. — predating full-scale textile production in the Indus Valley by roughly 2,000 years.

A plant that grew on every inhabited continent

The genus Gossypium includes dozens of species, and humans in widely separated regions domesticated different ones. Gossypium barbadense was cultivated earliest in the Americas. Gossypium herbaceum appears to have been domesticated around 5000 B.C.E. in eastern Sudan, near the Middle Nile Basin. In the Indus Valley, a separate species was being spun into thread long before the great cities of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa were built.

This parallel invention is one of the more striking patterns in human prehistory. Across thousands of miles and without shared communication, people kept arriving at the same solution. The cotton boll, with its long, strong fibers clinging to its seeds, was simply too useful to ignore.

By 3000 B.C.E., cotton was being grown and processed in both Mexico and the American Southwest — in what is now Arizona. Seeds and cordage from Peru date to around 2500 B.C.E. Microremains of cotton fibers, some dyed, found at Tel Tsaf in the Jordan Valley date to approximately 5200 B.C.E., suggesting early trade networks connecting South Asia to the ancient Near East far earlier than commonly assumed.

The knowledge that traveled with the fiber

Cotton did not travel alone. Wherever it spread, so did the technology to process it. The handheld roller cotton gin was in use in India by at least the 6th century C.E., and Indian textile workers had developed the dual-roller gin between the 12th and 14th centuries C.E. These tools moved — through trade, conquest, and migration — across the Mediterranean and eventually into Europe.

India’s role in the global cotton story is hard to overstate. The Greek historian Herodotus described Indian cotton in the 5th century B.C.E. as “a wool exceeding in beauty and goodness that of sheep.” When Alexander the Great’s forces arrived in India, his soldiers abandoned their wool garments for the lighter local cloth. By the time of the Mughal Empire, cotton textile manufacturing was the largest industry in the subcontinent — responsible for roughly a quarter of global textile trade.

The spinning wheel, introduced to Europe around 1350 C.E., had long been standard in Asia and the Middle East. The word “cotton” itself is Arabic — from qutn — a reminder that the fiber reached medieval Europe through Muslim-majority North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula, not through direct discovery.

Lasting impact

Few crops have shaped human civilization as durably as cotton. It drove the development of textile technology, from hand spindles to mechanized looms. It enabled complex trade networks across the ancient world — from the Indus Valley to Mesopotamia, from the Nile to the Mediterranean. The Industrial Revolution in Britain was built largely on cotton mills processing fiber from South Asia and, later, the American South.

Cotton also shapes the clothes most people in the world wear today. It remains one of the most widely grown non-food crops on Earth, with China and India as the largest producers. The spinning and weaving techniques developed over millennia — many of them originating in the Indus Valley and in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica — underlie the global textile industry.

The Nubian kingdom of Meroë, in what is now Sudan, became wealthy enough through cotton exports that the Aksumite king Ezana later boasted of destroying its cotton plantations during his conquest of the region — a measure of just how economically significant this crop had become by the early centuries C.E.

Blindspots and limits

The history of cotton cultivation is also inseparable from some of the worst episodes of forced labor in human history. In the American South before the Civil War, cotton production depended entirely on enslaved people — and the global demand for cheap cotton helped sustain that system for decades. Britain’s cotton mills, which powered the Industrial Revolution, were fed by that same enslaved labor. The story of cotton as a human achievement cannot be told fully without acknowledging that achievement was built, in a critical chapter, on profound human suffering.

The archaeological record also leaves real gaps. Because cotton decays quickly in humid climates, the oldest surviving textiles come disproportionately from dry regions — Peru, Pakistan, Egypt — which may mean we are missing evidence from humid tropical zones where cotton was also grown and used. The full picture of early cotton cultivation is almost certainly more complex than what has survived.

Scholars also continue to debate precise dates. The Tehuacán Valley cotton bolls from Mexico, once dated to around 5500 B.C.E., have been questioned by later researchers. Dating organic material across this time range involves genuine uncertainty, and the scholarly conversation about early cotton domestication remains active.

A thread connecting us all

What the evidence shows, across all its complexity, is a story of human ingenuity operating in parallel. People on opposite sides of the planet, working with the same unassuming plant, invented the same basic toolkit. They spun, they wove, they traded, and they improved on each other’s techniques whenever knowledge crossed borders.

Cotton cultivation, beginning at least 5,000 years ago and perhaps much earlier, is one of the clearest illustrations of a recurring truth in human history: when a good idea is possible, it tends to happen — often more than once, in more than one place, among more than one people. The fiber that connects ancient Peru, the Indus Valley, and the Middle Nile Basin is, in a sense, a thread running through the whole of human civilization.

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For more on this story, see: History of cotton — Wikipedia

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