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Richard the First
Reigned ten years: 1189-1199.
Born 1157. Married to Berengaria of Navarre.
THE
WOMEN
It is
difficult to describe an influence in clothes.
It is
difficult nowadays to say in millinery where Paris
begins and London accepts. The hint of Paris in a gown
suggests taste; the whole of Paris in a gown savours of
servile imitation.
No
well-dressed English- woman should, or does, look
French, but she may have a subtle cachet of France if
she choose.
The
perfection of art is to conceal the means to the end;
the perfection of dress is to hide the milliner in the
millinery.
The
ladies of Richard I.'s time did not wear Oriental
clothes, but they had a flavour of Orientalism pervading
their dress--rather mascu- line Orientalism than
feminine.
The
long cloak with the cord that held it over the
shoulders; the long, loose gown of fine colours and
simple designs; the soft, low, heelless shoes ; the
long, unbound hair, or the hair held up and concealed
under an untied wimple--these gave a touch of something
foreign to the dress.
Away in
the country there was little to dress for, and what
clothes they had were made in the house. Stuffs; brought
home from Cyprus, from Palestine, from Asia Minor, were
laboriously conveyed to the house, and there made up
into gowns. Local smiths and silver-workers made them
buckles and brooches and ornamental studs for their long
belts, or clasps for their purses.
A wreck
would break up on the shore near by, and the news would
arrive, perhaps, that some bales of stuff were washed
ashore and were to be sold.
The
female anchorites of these days were busy gossips, and
from their hermitage or shelter by a bridge on the road
would see the world go by, and pick up friends by means
of gifts of bandages or purses made by them, despite the
fact that this traffic was forbidden to them.
So the
lady in the country might get news of her lord abroad,
and hear that certain silks and stuffs were on their way
home.
The
gowns they wore were long, flowing and loose; they were
girded about the middle with leathern or silk belts,
which drew the gown loosely together. The end of the
belt, after being buckled, hung down to about the knee.
These gowns were close at the neck, and there fastened
by a brooch; the sleeves were wide until they came to
the wrist, over which they fitted closely.
The
cloaks were ample, and were held on by brooches or laces
across the bosom.
The
shoes were the shape of the foot, sewn, embroidered,
elaborate.
The
wimples were pieces of silk or white linen held to the
hair in front by pins, and allowed to flow over the head
at the back.
There
were still remaining at this date women who wore the
tight-fitting gown laced at the back, and who tied their
chins up in gorgets. |