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Images Dated 19th July 2006 (page 3)

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Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Lady Audley, 16th century, (1910)

Lady Audley, 16th century, (1910). Portrait after Holbein of Elizabeth, Lady Audley wearing the Transition style of headdress, a combination of the coif and the kennel

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Anne Boleyn, 16th century, (1910)

Anne Boleyn, 16th century, (1910). Portrait after Holbein of Anne (1507-1536) wearing a tightly-fitting coif tied under the chin - undoubtedly the progenitor of the French hood

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Marchioness of Dorset, 16th century, (1910)

Marchioness of Dorset, 16th century, (1910). Portrait after Holbein of Margaret Wotton, Marchioness of Dorset, wearing a pyramidal style headdress with ribbed bands of silk upon the forehead forming

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Male dress, 16th century, (1910)

Male dress, 16th century, (1910). Example of mens dress showing the hanging sleeve. He is armed with sword and buckler (shield). His flat cap hangs upon his shoulder by a cord

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Male costume, 16th century, (1910)

Male costume, 16th century, (1910). A citizen of the better class wearing a mandevile a sort of waistcoat fitted loosely round the body, with no sleeves

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Lady Mary, 16th century, (1910)

Lady Mary, 16th century, (1910). Portrait of Queen Mary wearing a pyramidal style headdress with ribbed bands of silk upon the forehead forming the foundation

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Lord Cobham, 16th century, (1910)

Lord Cobham, 16th century, (1910). Portrait of George Brooke, ninth Lord Cobham ( c1497-1558). He wears a ludicrous example of the flat cap, not even relieved by small feathers

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Steward and serving men, 15th century, (1910)

Steward and serving men, 15th century, (1910). The steward has a rod of office. He and his men wear pied hose and sugar-loaf caps

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Artificers, 15th century, (1910)

Artificers, 15th century, (1910). A group of workmen with their tools from the time of Edward IV (1461-1483). Illustration from British Costume during 19 Centuries by Mrs Charles H Ashdown, (London)

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: A dinner party, late 15th century, (1910)

A dinner party, late 15th century, (1910). Noticeable is the variety of the hats of the men, and their pourpoints (jackets) and sleeves

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: A banquet, late 15th century, (1910)

A banquet, late 15th century, (1910). A man on the left wears several large feathers in his hat. Illustration from British Costume during 19 Centuries by Mrs Charles H Ashdown, (London, 1910)

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Ladies costume, early 16th century, (1910)

Ladies costume, early 16th century, (1910). Female dress from the time of Henry VII (1509-1547). The train worn by the woman in the centre is looped up through the girdle at the back

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Early pyramidal headdress, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910)

Early pyramidal headdress, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910). The pyramidal headdress developed from the broad band of the steeple headdress

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Three minstrels, c1480, (1910)

Three minstrels, c1480, (1910). Representation after a manuscript of the Romance of the Rose, part of a larger scene representing the karole or dance of Sire Mirthe

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Male and female costume, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910)

Male and female costume, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910). A couple of the time of Henry VII, (1485-1509). The woman has large

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Male head-gear, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910)

Male head-gear, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910). Three aspects of a dandy - right, finishing his toilet: taking a silver needle from the needle-case

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Head-gear, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910)

Head-gear, late 15th-early 16th century, (1910). This dandy from the time of Henry VII, (1485-1509), has tied a silk scarf over the top of his unwieldy hat to keep it in place

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Henry VII, late 15th century, (1910)

Henry VII, late 15th century, (1910). Portrait of the king (1485-1509), showing the very full fur-lined cloak over the stomacher

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Matron and servant in the sick-chamber, c1470, (1910)

Matron and servant in the sick-chamber, c1470, (1910). Tobit, blind in bed, is attended by two women. One of the women sits by the fire where a cooking pot hangs on an adjustable ratchet

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Joan, daughter of the Earl of Salisbury, 15th century, (1910)

Joan, daughter of the Earl of Salisbury, 15th century, (1910). A 19th-century copy of an effigy in Arundel Church, Sussex, showing the elaborate headdresses popular at the time

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Margaret of Scotland, c 1483, (1910)

Margaret of Scotland, c 1483, (1910). Margaret was the Danish queen of James III of Scotland. Her headdress is an intermediate style between the butterfly and the pyramidal

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Margaret, Lady Peyton, c1484, (1910)

Margaret, Lady Peyton, c1484, (1910). A representation copied from a brass at Isleham Church, Cambridgeshire, showing Lady Peyton wearing the butterfly headdress

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: The butterfly headdress, 15th century, (1910)

The butterfly headdress, 15th century, (1910). A woman from the time of Edward IV-Richard III, wearing a headdress showing the frontlet

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Horned and steeple headdresses, 15th century, (1910)

Horned and steeple headdresses, 15th century, (1910). The example in the centre is a truncated parody of the steeple, and on the right is a hybrid of the old-fashioned horned style combined with an

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Masque of Charles VI of France, c1480, (1910)

Masque of Charles VI of France, c1480, (1910). Veils are distended by wires, with knights disguised in close-fitting hairy garments and masks

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: The steeple headdress and veil, 15th century, (1910)

The steeple headdress and veil, 15th century, (1910). Lady of the Tournament wearing rich veiling with her headdress. Illustration from British Costume during 19 Centuries by Mrs Charles H Ashdown

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Female headdresses, 15th century, (1910)

Female headdresses, 15th century, (1910). The frontlet was composed of a piece of rigid wire netting covered with black material which passed over the head

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Poleyns, 15th century, (1910)

Poleyns, 15th century, (1910). Poleyns, a type of pointed shoe, from the reign of Edward IV (1461-1483), showing construction

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Male headgear, 15th century, (1910)

Male headgear, 15th century, (1910). Examples of ornamented bycockets, peaked caps. A gold crown encircles that of the king (right), the summit finished with an ornamental boss of gold

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: The bycocket, c1470, (1910)

The bycocket, c1470, (1910). Thr domed top of the bycocket (peaked cap) is shown in modified form. The man on the right has a hurdy-gurdy, a type of musical instrument

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Men wearing favours in their hats, 15th century, (1910)

Men wearing favours in their hats, 15th century, (1910). Small shields of arms are placed in their hats, being those of their partisans in a forthcoming tournament

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: The berretino and poleyn, 15th century, (1910)

The berretino and poleyn, 15th century, (1910). Examples of male costume, showing the method of carrying the berretino with its hanging becca

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Royal banquet, 15th century, (1910)

Royal banquet, 15th century, (1910). At this time the pourpoint - a short jacket - was worn with mahoitres - padded shoulders

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Male costume, 15th century, (1910)

Male costume, 15th century, (1910). Mens dress from the time of Edward IV (1461-1483). The style features broad shoulders and a narrow waist

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: An exquisite, 15th century, (1910)

An exquisite, 15th century, (1910). A dandy from the early reign of Edward IV (1461-1483), wearing a peaked cap (Bycocket), a pourpoint with long hanging sleeves edged with ermine

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Development of the sleeve, 15th century, (1910)

Development of the sleeve, 15th century, (1910). Dress from the reign of Edward IV (1461-1483). The sleeve is formed into a cylinder with a hole in the upper part for the arm to pass through

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: The military pourpoint, 15th century, (1910)

The military pourpoint, 15th century, (1910). The pourpoint was a short jacket made by sewing or quilting two layers of fabric with padding between, used by soldiers under armour to prevent chafing

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Lord Rivers and Caxton before Edward IV, 15th century, (1910)

Lord Rivers and Caxton before Edward IV, 15th century, (1910)
Lord Rivers and the printer William Caxton before Edward IV, 15th century, (1910). Edward (1442-1483) wears an imperial arched diadem, a cape of ermine

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Bedroom scene, 15th century, (1910)

Bedroom scene, 15th century, (1910). An interior from the time of Henry VI, (1422-1471). The nurse seated upon the huche wears a very common form of the horned headdress

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: King, queen, and court, c1450, (1910)

King, queen, and court, c1450, (1910). The turban headdress was in vogue for a considerable period, and was undoubtedly based on an Oriental model

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Card party, early 16th century, (1910)

Card party, early 16th century, (1910). The turban headdress which began in the reign of Henry VI (1422-1461), was still popular

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Carpenter and fisherman, 15th century, (1910)

Carpenter and fisherman, 15th century, (1910). Ordinary dress of working people from the Transition Period - Henry VI-Edward IV

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Costumes, 15th century, (1910)

Costumes, 15th century, (1910). Clothing from the Transition Period, Henry VI-Edward IV, 1450s-1480s. Illustration from British Costume during 19 Centuries by Mrs Charles H Ashdown, (London, 1910)

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Riding habit, 15th century, (1910)

Riding habit, 15th century, (1910). Riding clothes from the time of King Henry VI, (1422-1461). The turban is lined with white fur, the pied jacket is of two colours, and high boots are worn

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: The architects of the Church of St Ouen, Rouen, c1440, (1910)

The architects of the Church of St Ouen, Rouen, c1440, (1910). Design made from an incised slab, showing the capuchon or berretino, (also at times called the roundlet)

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Henry VI presenting a sword to John Talbot, Earl of Salisbury, c1445, (1910)

Henry VI presenting a sword to John Talbot, Earl of Salisbury, c1445, (1910). Henry presents a sword to John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: Bag sleeves, 15th century, (1910)

Bag sleeves, 15th century, (1910). Male dress of the time of Henry VI, (1422-1471). Sleeves have been modified by the addition of two other exits for the arms

Background imageImages Dated 19th July 2006: John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, presenting a book to Margaret of Anjou, c1445, (1910)

John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, presenting a book to Margaret of Anjou, c1445, (1910). John Talbot presents Margaret of Anjou with an illuminated book (The Shrewsbury Book)



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