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Topic: 15th century clothing & culture Posted: 19-Nov-2004 at 18:03 |
Hello all,
I'm looking for images of peasant/commoner dress in 15th century
Europe. Everything I've found seems to totally ignore what the
masses were wearing in favor of showing us the exceptions to the rule.
Thanks in advance
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Cornellia
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Posted: 19-Nov-2004 at 20:02 |
You didn't say what part of Europe you were interested in and I'm afraid most of my resources lean more toward England and France but a couple of really good books on the subject are:
Medieval Costume in England and France by Mary G. Houston.
Comes complete with illustrations, discussions on the construction and diagrams which could be used to help create patterns if you're talented that way. Covers royalty down to peasant.
A History of Costume by Carl Kohler
Tudor Costume and Fashion by Herbert Norris
Late in the period and you can see the switch from the more simple costumes to the elaborate Elizabethan. However, the peasant/commoner dress was very slow to change.
This is a reenactor's costume website but you can get a good look at what the costumes may have looked like.
http://www.historicenterprises.com/
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Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas
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Posted: 19-Nov-2004 at 21:10 |
Thank you Cornellia!
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Posted: 19-Nov-2004 at 21:21 |
"Late in the period and you can see the switch from the more simple
costumes to the elaborate Elizabethan. However, the peasant/commoner
dress was very slow to change."
That's what my guess was, but I was still hoping for pics. If I'm
looking to approximate 15th century peasant/commoner dress, what
centuries should I accept as proxy? I'm not a stickler, I just
don't want any egregious errors - maybe 13th-15th?
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Dawn
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Posted: 20-Nov-2004 at 00:49 |
Like Cornillia,most of my books deal in England and France.
these two may be of help
Mary G. Houston, Medieval Costume in England and France, 1939, London: Adam and Charles Black.
Stella Mary Newton, Fashion in the Age of the Black Prince, 1980, Woodbridge: Boydell
Baring those there are a few web sites out there.I'll see if I can find some of my old book marks. I would look back rather than forward in time if you must take a proxy as the changes in the 16 century where great.
You never said what you where looking for exactly. I remember fnding a lot of information by searching particular peicesof clothing ie; "the history of cod pieces" something like that might help.
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vagabond
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Posted: 20-Nov-2004 at 02:19 |
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In the time of your life, live - so that in that wonderous time you shall not add to the misery and sorrow of the world, but shall smile to the infinite delight and mystery of it. (Saroyan)
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Posted: 20-Nov-2004 at 08:26 |
Dawn, thanks for the titles, and for the excellent advice on narrowing my searches.
Vagabond, thanks for the links, I'll check them out; I've only checked
the first so far, but it's excellent - I found it last night and saved
every image from the late 14th to the early 16th.
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Dawn
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Posted: 20-Nov-2004 at 10:28 |
it wasn't much but y ou are very welcome and by the way welcome to the forum
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Dawn
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Posted: 20-Nov-2004 at 16:00 |
I found this one lurking around at the bottom of my bookmarks might be of use
http://www.costumes.org/history/100pages/medievalinks.htm
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Centrix Vigilis
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Posted: 18-Jul-2011 at 23:13 |
Caicai the spammer is caca.
And like Ray, Egon he is gone bye bye.
Edited by Centrix Vigilis - 18-Jul-2011 at 23:14
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"Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence"
S. T. Friedman
Pilger's law: 'If it's been officially denied, then it's probably true'
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Nick1986
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Posted: 29-Aug-2011 at 20:22 |
Peter Brueghel specialised in painting the continental peasantry. Here is a painting of a town scene c.1550
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Me Grimlock not nice Dino! Me bash brains!
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Karalem
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Posted: 30-Aug-2011 at 04:09 |
In many European countries peasants were wearing no shoes, and that's up till the nineteenth century, so in the fifteen century would be no better. Mother of the philosopher Artur Schopenhauer described her journey through England and Scotland. While in England most people had shoes, in Scotland only few.
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