Bast
Bast is a term with two primary meanings in different domains. In botany and textile history, bast refers to the long, strong fibers derived from the phloem, or inner bark, of dicot plants. Common bast fibers include flax, hemp, jute, kenaf, ramie, and nettle. These fibers are extracted from the plant’s inner bark through processes such as retting, scutching, and hackling. Traditionally, bast fibers have been used to make rope, twine, and coarse fabrics; in modern times they are also used in natural-fiber composites and specialty textiles.
In Egyptian mythology, Bast (often Bastet in later transliterations) is the goddess associated with home, fertility,
The two senses—plant-derived fibers and the Egyptian goddess—are unrelated etymologically but share the same spelling in