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The best new research on medieval clothing and textiles, drawing
from a range of disciplines and with a special focus on
reconstruction and re-enactment. Historical dress and textiles,
always a topic of popular interest, has in recent years become an
academic subject in its own right, transcending traditional genre
boundaries. This annual journal includes in-depth studies from a
variety of disciplines as well as cross-genre scholarship,
representing such fields as social history, economics, history of
techniques and technology, art history, archaeology, literature,
and language. The contents cover a broad geographical scope and a
range of periods from the early Middle Ages to the Renaissance.
Papers in this latest volume discuss clothing descriptions in an
early Irish poem in relation to archaeological finds; the Latin
inscription embroidered on the Bayeux Tapestry; clothmaking in
twelfth-century French romances; medieval Paris as an international
textile market; the cost of sartorial excess in England as attested
by sumptuary laws and satire; textile cleaning techniques at a
German convent in the fifteenth century; the use of jewelled animal
pelts as fashion accessories in the Renaissance; and the social
significance of the embroidered jacket in early modern England.
Also included are reviews of recent books on dress and textile
topics. ROBIN NETHERTON's research focuses on medieval Western
European clothing and its interpretation by artists and historians;
GALE R. OWEN-CROCKER is Professor ofAnglo-Saxon Culture, The
University of Manchester. Her most recent books are Dress in
Anglo-Saxon England (2004), and King Harold II and the Bayeux
Tapestry (2005). Contributors: Niamh Whitfield, Gale R.
Owen-Crocker, Monica L. Wright, Sharon Farmer, Margaret Rose
Jaster, Drea Leed, Tawny Sherrill, Danielle Nunn-Weinberg
Niamh Whitfield is a leading authority on the metalwork of early
Medieval Ireland and Scotland. Celtic metalwork of the seventh to
twelfth centuries is extremely accomplished technically, and she
has aimed at a thorough understanding of its manufacture. She has
also been concerned to place Early Medieval Celtic design in its
European context, and to analyse its relationship with Anglo-Saxon
and continental work, as well as its debt to traditions which
ultimately originated in the Classical world. Dr Whitfield has
written about subjects as diverse as the origins of the gold used
in early Medieval Ireland and Scotland, the development of animal
ornament and geometrical principles of design. Her archival studies
have succeeded in identifying the find-spot of the celebrated
'Tara' brooch and in documenting panels of ornament which are now
missing. In addition, she has explored early Irish texts for
attitudes to jewellery and clothing, considered the brooch as an
emblem of status, looked at how brooches were worn, and whether
descriptions of clothing and accessories in an early Irish saga
provide an accurate description of contemporary finery.
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