Medieval Dress and Fashion

Margaret Scott

Margaret Scott

Distributed for British Library

208 pages | 120 color plates, 20 halftones | 8-1/2 x 11 | © 2007
Cloth $55.00 ISBN: 9780712306751 Published June 2007 For sale in North and South America only
From Renaissance fairs to countless retellings of the legend of Robin Hood to the popular restaurant Medieval Times, people remain fascinated by the medieval era—and in particular the clothing of the time. The richly varied dress of medieval days meant more than just fashion and style, and Margaret Scott offers here an insightful chronicle of the layered meanings of the garb worn by queens, kings, courtiers, and peasants.
            Scott draws upon the vibrant illuminated manuscripts of the era to analyze the beautiful design and functionality of medieval clothing. Fascinating changes mark the development of medieval fashion, such as the transition in men’s grooming from wearing beards and long hair to being clean-shaven with short hair; the rise in women’s fashion in the fourteenth century as a method of securing a husband; and the various types of jewelry, fabric, and subtle garment fittings that managed to convey the important distinctions between the upper class and the peasantry. Such distinctions, Scott reveals, were enforced by intricate and strict laws passed in countries throughout Europe that governed the color, styles, and number of a citizen’s garments according to their career, social class, and even the times of year. Political and religious history were also critical factors, Medieval Dress and Fashion shows, as the book draws from first-hand accounts to analyze how pivotal historical moments such as the Crusades and the fall of the Roman Empire resulted in an unexpected blending of cultures and clothing styles.
            Whether their interest lies in class or corsets, readers curious about the costumes of the past will be charmed by Margaret Scott’s lively and engaging book.

Library Journal
"The book is lavishly illustrated . . . and written in an easy-to-read style through which Scott's enthusiasm for her subject shines."

Contents
Introduction
 
1. Dressing the Great and the Good, c.840–c.1100
2. The Start of Fashion, c.1100–c.1130
3. Fashion and Formality, c.1300–c.1400
4. Dressing Everybody, c.1400–c.1500
5. Dressing the Present and the Past, c.1500–c.1570

Bibliography
Glossary
Index  
For more information, or to order this book, please visit http://www.press.uchicago.edu
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