The best new research on medieval clothing and textiles, drawing from a range of disciplines.
The essays collected here continue the
Journal’s wide-ranging and eclectic tradition. Topics include literary evidence for linen armour; serial production in late medieval silks; the inventory of Isabella Bruce’s bridal goods; the depiction of women textile workers in the frescoes of the Salone of the Palazzo della Ragione in Padua, Italy; ideal female beauty in the Middle Ages and the means used to attain and assess it; and social status as evidenced by clothing and textiles in the Scottish royal treasurer’s accounts of the mid-sixteenth century.
Содержание
Preface
1. Linen Armour in the Frankish Countries. Part 1. The Twelfth Century —
Sean Manning
2. Serial Production and Individualisation in Late Medieval Silk Weaving —
Michael Peter
3. The Trousseau of Isabella Bruce, Queen of Norway —
Valeria Di Clemente
4. Make and Create: The Craftswomen in the Salone Frescoes of the Palazzo della Ragione, Padua —
Darrelyn Gunzburg
5. Combs, Mirrors and other Female Beauty Bling in the Middle Ages —
John Block Friedman
6. The Dividing Lines of Social Status in Sixteenth-Century Scottish Fashion —
Melanie Schuessler Bond
Об авторе
Cordelia Warr is Professor of Medieval and Renaissance Art at the University of Manchester, UK. She has published on a variety of topics including medieval and early-modern religious clothing in Italy, art in Naples, as well as miraculous wounds.