Queen Arnegundis
May. 17th, 2008 04:55 pmThe remnants of Queen Arnegunde (frankish, 6th century) have been examined again, by Antoinette Rast-Eicher, for the first time since the 1950s. More pieces have been found while some that were there fifty years ago are now gone. Better analysis has "corrected" previous interpretations and this is (a very bad photo) of the new reconstruction.
As you can see it is a photo of a Powerpoint presentation. For a better picture we will have to wait for the conference report.
As you can see it is a photo of a Powerpoint presentation. For a better picture we will have to wait for the conference report.
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Date: 2008-05-17 03:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-17 04:30 pm (UTC)/Eva
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Date: 2008-05-17 05:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-17 06:13 pm (UTC)/Eva
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Date: 2008-05-18 04:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-18 10:10 am (UTC)Very cool though. Thank you!
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Date: 2008-05-18 11:13 am (UTC)I the separate skirt disappears sometime in the Iron Age, but it really is very far from my field of expertise too.
/Eva
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Date: 2008-05-19 07:11 am (UTC)There seems to a lot of people who have reverse-engineered modern, skirted folk costumes, back to the middle ages who mention medieval separate skirts.
The main book that springs to mind, is
Linda Welters [ed] (1999) Folk Dress in Europe and Anatolia Berg Publishes. ISBN:1859732879, with the article by E.J.W. Barber on the poneva apron/skirt worn in Eastern Europe.
There is also the theory about a 'Goddess' on the Oseberg tapestry wearing a seperate skirt and shirt. There is also a theory of the Rus' women wearing poneva, see here for a translation, and there's a bracelet that is believed to show the skirt.
There's a line drawing on page 713 of Folk Dress in Europe and Anatolia online at Google books.
It also shows up in some Latvian dress reconstructions, with a linen underdress, and a woolen skirt wrapped around the waist. I can dig up some better references than just websites if you'd like, but here is a bunch of photos of what I mean. (The other major reconstruction theory seems to favour peplos-style overdresses. Both of them can be seen in a 17th century sketch of Lithuanians, page 55 of Ancient Finnish Costumes.)
As you can tell, I'm heavily biased towards North-Eastern Europe, so I'm not sure about any other examples. But I hope the information helps.
Especially since Arnegunde wasn't wearing a chemise and skirt in anything I've read.
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Date: 2008-05-19 10:05 am (UTC)But Oseberg is Iron Age too, so it fits (in the nordic countries the Middle Ages start approx. 1000 and viking age is just a subcategory to iron age). Anyway, most folk costumes were recorded and in many case reconstructed in the 19th century so they're not a good source to early medieval dress.
/Eva
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Date: 2008-05-19 11:48 am (UTC)The work of archaeologists like Audrone Bliujiene, where the original archaelogical reports are examined, and then compared with contemporary finds, instead of with what a 19th century peasant wore.
The Baltic dress seemed to have been worn up to the 12th century, which correlates with Crusader-period Finnish peplos dresses too. Depending on your definition of where the Iron age ends, and the Middle ages again, in that corner of the world, it seems the middle ages didn't really start till the 12-13th centuries. So, you're right that it doesn't seem to be a medieval thing.
(I just read a lot, not an expert at all. And I ramble, sorry.)
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Date: 2008-05-19 11:58 am (UTC)/Eva
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Date: 2008-05-19 12:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-21 09:08 am (UTC): )
Thanks for that!
Alex
Arnegonde schematic reconstruction
Date: 2008-06-06 09:23 am (UTC)Link to the game (http://www.saint-denis.culture.fr/en/jeux.htm?jeu=mp03.swf)
Link the pdf file (http://www.saint-denis.culture.fr/en/mp03_pdf_3.pdf)
Re: Arnegonde schematic reconstruction
Date: 2008-06-09 08:22 am (UTC)bTW did you get my medieval underwear pics?