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El. knyga: Medieval Clothing and Textiles 17

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The best new research on medieval clothing and textiles, drawing from a variety of angles and approaches.

The essays here take us from the twelfth century, with an exploration of an inventory of Mediterranean textiles from an Ifriqiyan Church, into an examination and reconstruction of an extant thirteenth-century sleeve in France which provides a rare and early example of medieval quilted armour, and finally on to late medieval Sweden and the reconstruction of gilt-leather intarsia coverlets. A study of construction techniques and the evolution of form of gable and French hoods in the late medieval and the early modern periods follows; and the volume also includes a study of how underwear for depicted in Renaissance paintings and manuscript illuminations serves as a marker of class.

Contributors include Catherine Besson-Lagier, Karen Margrethe Høskuldsson, Maria Neijman, Nancy Spies, Amica Sundström, and Carla Tilghman.
Preface
Embroidered Beasts: Animals in the Bayeux Tapestry - Gale R. Owen-Crocker
The Sleeve from Bussy-Saint-Martin: A Rare Example of Medieval Quilted Armor
- Catherine Besson-Lagier
The Administration of Cloth and Clothing in the Great Wardrobe of Edward I -
Charles Farris
Hanging Together: Furnishing Textiles in a Fifteenth-Century Book of Hours -
Anne Kirkham
Gilt-leather Embroideries from Medieval Sweden and Finland -Amica Sundström
and Maria Neijman
From Hennin to Hood: An Analysis of the Evolution of the English Hood
Compared to the Evolution of the French Hood -Karen Margrethe Hųskuldsson
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. Anne Kirkham is Honorary Research Fellow in Medieval Art at The University of Manchester. Robin Netherton is a costume historian specializing in Western European clothing of the Middle Ages and its interpretation by artists and historians. Gale R. Owen-Crocker is Professor Emerita of the University of Manchester where she was previously Professor of Anglo-Saxon Culture and Director of the Manchester Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies. Monica L. Wright is the Granger and Debaillon Professor of French and Medieval Studies at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA. Her research focuses on the use of clothing in medieval French literature.