INSI´LIA
INSI´LIA from insilire, a part of the loom (only in Lucret. 5.1353). They were supposed to be the treadles, pressed by the weaver's foot; but the epithet levia, smooth or polished, does not suit these; and the insilia are more probably the heddles or leash-rods which open the warp. (Schneider, Index to Scriptores Rei Rusticae, s. v. Tela; Rich, s.v. Munro, ad loc.)As the word is not found elsewhere, its meaning can only be guessed (Munro: so also Blümner, Technol. 1.143 n.).
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