Anglo Saxon Costumes
Dress in Anglo-Saxon England: Revised and Enlarged Edition
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When it first came out in 1986, Gale Owen-Crocker's book was a milestone in costume studies, a foundation on which much work has subsequently been based. Nearly twenty years later, there is more to be said, and this updated edition is long overdue. An encyclopaedic study of English dress from the fifth to the eleventh centuries, it draws evidence from archaeology, text and art (manuscripts, ivories, metalwork, stone sculpture, mosaics), and also from re-enactors' experience. It examines archaeological textiles, cloth production and the significance of imported cloth and foreign fashions. Dress is discussed as a marker of gender, ethnicity, status and social role - in the context of a pagan burial, dress for holy orders, bequests of clothing, commissioning a kingly wardrobe, and much else - and surviving dress fasteners and accessories are examined with regard to type and to geographical/chronological distribution. There are colour reconstructions of early Anglo-Saxon dress and a cutting pattern for a gown from the Bayeux tapestry; Old English garment names are discussed, and there is a glossary of costume and other relevant terms. GALE OWEN-CROCKER is Professor of Anglo-Saxon Culture at the University of Manchester. She has a special interest in dress throughout the medieval period - she advises on dress entries to the Toronto Old English Dictionary and has consulted for many museums and television companies. She is co-editor of the new journal Medieval Clothing and Textiles. Generously illustrated with 25 plates, 12 in colour, and 140 drawings.
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- Best Choice - #1 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 94 Reviews
Star55 Big Girls' Viking Anglo Saxon Celtic Warrior Fancy Dres Costume Costume Only Large 10-12 Years Brown
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Girls Viking Anglo Saxon Celtic Warrior Fancy Dress Costume 7-9 yrs 10-12 yrsGirls Viking Costume Dress with Fur Trim& Wristcuffs Costume Only Does NOT include helmet or weapon Approximate Sizes: Medium: 7-9 years Large: 10-12 years All children are different, if your child is bigger or smaller than average please take that into consideration
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- Best Choice - #2 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 22 Reviews
Charlie Crow Alfred Anglo-Saxon Costume for Kids 9-11 Years
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- Alfred Anglo-Saxon costume for
- Two sizes to fit children aged 7-9 and 9-11
- Costume includes tunic, belt and
- Machine washable. 100%
- Conforms to European & North American safety regulations. As a precaution keep away from fire. For more information view the product details
Charlie Crow Alfred Anglo-Saxon costume for children. Costume includes tunic, belt and Helmet. Fits children aged 9-11 years. Height 152cm. Machine washable. See costume for full instructions. 100% polyester. Wash at 30 degrees. No Bleach. Do not tumble dry. Do not iron. Do not dry clean. Conforms to European safety regulations. As a precaution keep away from fire. Charlie Crow is an independent, family run company. We offer our own award winning designs, which are made in our workshop in Staffordshire, Great Britain. For over 21 years we having been providing fun, innovative costumes that allow children to explore their own creativity. We guarantee that every product we create conforms to all safety regulations in both Europe and the USA.
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- Best Choice - #3 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 38 Reviews
Synopsis Of Ancient Costume, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, British, Anglo-Saxon, Norman And English
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- Best Choice - #4 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 19 Reviews
Charlie Crow Edith Anglo-Saxon or Celt Costume for Girls 5-7 Years
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- Edith Anglo-Saxon costume for
- Three sizes to fit children aged 5-7, 7-9 and 9-11
- Costume includes Dress, Shawl and
- Conforms to European & North American safety regulations. As a precaution keep away from fire. For more information view the product details
Charlie Crow Edith Anglo-Saxon or Celt costume for girls. Costume includes Dress, Shawl and Headband. Fits children aged 5-7 years. Height 128cm. Machine washable. See costume for full instructions. 100% polyester. Wash at 30 degrees. No Bleach. Do not tumble dry. Do not iron. Do not dry clean. Conforms to European safety regulations. As a precaution keep away from fire. Charlie Crow is an independent, family run company. We offer our own award winning designs, which are made in our workshop in Staffordshire, Great Britain. For over 21 years we having been providing fun, innovative costumes that allow children to explore their own creativity. We guarantee that every product we create conforms to all safety regulations in both Europe and the USA.
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- Best Choice - #5 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 100 Reviews
Cloth and Clothing in Early Anglo Saxon England, AD 450-700 (CBA Research Report)
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This archaeological study of textiles and costume considers all aspects of Early Anglo-Saxon clothing - how textiles were made in the Early Anglo-Saxon settlements, how the cloth was fashioned into garments, and the nature of the clasps and jewellery with which the clothes were worn. It is both a practical guide to the manufacture of clothing and a review of the significance of textiles and costume within Anglo-Saxon society. Drawing from a database of 3,800 finds, the book includes a review of the primary evidence from 162 Anglo-Saxon cemeteries, where small fragments of the dead's clothes have been preserved with brooches, pins and necklaces. Regional styles of dress, the social and cultural meaning behind changing fashions, the role of women in textile production, and Scandinavian and Continental influences help place the study in its broader historical and archaeological context. This book will be suitable for general readers, undergraduate students, and re-enactors, as well as archaeologists excavating sites of the period and those working in the heritage industry on the reconstruction of Anglo-Saxon life.
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- Best Choice - #6 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 53 Reviews
Anglo-Saxon Propaganda in the Bayeux Tapestry (Studies in French Civilization)
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This study details the secret, subversive and sustaining Anglo-Saxon messages encoded in a work of art that purportedly celebrates the Norman French conquest of England. This is a pioneering perspective that no other scholar has brought to the Tapestry. The story told by the Bayeux Tapestry is one of feudal oaths, retribution, battle and the violent death of Anglo-Saxon England. It begs the question--why did the English tapestry master create such a portrait? The answer is he puts his great skill to use to balance loose Norman dynastic claims with compassion and comfort for the Anglo-Saxons. The ambiguities of style, language and iconography, facilitate the subtextual and subversive Anglo-Saxon messages incorporated into the Tapestry. In addition, the tapestry master intertwines Anglo-Saxon cultural practices, oral tradition and literature to remind the viewer of the English side of the story. The primary element of Anglo-Saxon heroism is fame after death—dôm. And the Tapestry gives Harold Godwinson his dôm in four ways. First, he gives Harold many full frontal depictions, rather than profiles, and surrounds him with white space, giving a visual pause, compelling the viewer to stop and think about the man. Second, he shows Harold in Christ like iconography as in the "harrowing of hell" scene when Godwinson rescues two Norman soldiers from the quicksand at Couesnon. Third, the Tapestry clearly labels him as king rex anglorum. (William is never called such.) Harold very easily could have been labeled tyrannus, the Latin word for usurper--and it would have taken up less space in the already cramped post-coronation scene. The Tapestry also makes use of the ambiguity built into Latin when he indicates that Harold interfecit est. Interfecit, a polysemous term, means killed, murdered or even martyred in Latin. Finally, and perhaps most importantly the Tapestry shows us how culturally, the oath Harold took was understood... [Read More]
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- Best Choice - #7 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 14 Reviews
The Costume of the original inhabitants of the British Islands, from the earliest periods to the sixth century ;: To which is added, that of the ... of the Anglo-Saxons and the Anglo-Danes
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- Best Choice - #8 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 34 Reviews
Roman Anglo-Saxon and Viking Children's Costumes: How to Make Historical Costumes in a Hurry - an Easy Guide
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- Best Choice - #9 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 100 Reviews
Dress in Anglo-Saxon England
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- Best Choice - #10 Anglo Saxon Costumes
- Checked on 27/02/2023
- Based on 100 Reviews
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