Delete Search...
A history of lace
- Titel
- A history of lace
- Autor
- Palliser, Fanny
- Verleger
- Marston
- Searle
- Low
- Erscheinungsort
- London
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1875
- Umfang
- X, 454 S.
- Sprache
- English
- Signatur
- 75/4694
- Vorlage
- Westsächsische Hochschule Zwickau
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- CC BY-SA 4.0
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id4470176161
- PURL
- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id447017616
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-447017616
- SLUB-Katalog (PPN)
- 447017616
- Sammlungen
- Bestände der Westsächsischen Hochschule Zwickau
- Design
- Historische textiltechnische Fachliteratur
- Ausgabe
- 3. ed.
- Strukturtyp
- Monographie
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
- Titel
- Chapter XXII. England To Queen Elizabeth
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Strukturtyp
- Kapitel
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- MonographieA history of lace -
- EinbandEinband -
- AbbildungBarbara Uttmann, who introduced the lace manufacture into the ... -
- TitelblattTitelblatt III
- KapitelPreface V
- KapitelChapter I. Needlework 1
- KapitelChapter II. Cutwork 10
- KapitelChapter III. Lace 21
- KapitelChapter IV. Italy 34
- KapitelChapter V. Greece 65
- KapitelChapter VI. Spain 71
- KapitelChapter VII. Flanders 86
- KapitelChapter VIII. France To Louis XIV. 114
- KapitelChapter IX. Louis XIV. 124
- KapitelChapter X. Louis XIV. (continued) 131
- KapitelChapter XI. Louis XV. 142
- KapitelChapter XII. Louis XVI. To the Empire 150
- KapitelChapter XIII. The Lace Manufactures Of France 158
- KapitelChapter XIV. Argentan 173
- KapitelChapter XV. Isle De France. - Paris 180
- KapitelChapter XVI. Normandy 186
- KapitelChapter XVII. Valenciennes 197
- KapitelChapter XVIII. Auvergne And Vélay 211
- KapitelChapter XIX. Limousin 218
- KapitelChapter XX. Holland, Germany, And Switzerland 225
- KapitelChapter XXI. Denmark, Sweden, And Russia 238
- KapitelChapter XXII. England To Queen Elizabeth 251
- KapitelChapter XXIII. Queen Elizabeth 264
- KapitelChapter XXIV. James I. To The Restoration 280
- KapitelChapter XXV. Charles II. To The House Of Hanover 299
- KapitelChapter XXVI. George I. And II. 314
- KapitelChapter XXVII. Smuggling 320
- KapitelChapter XXVIII. George III. 325
- KapitelChapter XXIX. The Lack Manufactures Of England 332
- KapitelChapter XXX. Bedfordshire, Bucklinghamshire, And Northamptonshire 336
- KapitelChapter XXXI. Wiltshire And Dorsetshire 351
- KapitelChapter XXXII. Devonshire 355
- KapitelChapter XXXIII. Scotland 370
- KapitelChapter XXXIV. Lace Manufactures Of Scotland 381
- KapitelChapter XXXV. Ireland 388
- KapitelChapter XXXVI. Bobbin-Net And Machine-Made Lace 395
- KapitelAppendix 405
- RegisterIndex 445
- EinbandEinband -
- Titel
- A history of lace
- Autor
- Links
-
Downloads
- Download single page (JPG)
-
Fulltext page (XML)
252 HISTORY OF LACE. of embroideries and such like, but no distinct allusion to “ lace.” 1 According to Anderson, the first intimation of such an occupa tion being known in England is the complaint, made in 1454, by the women of the mystery of thread-working in London, in conse quence of the importation of six foreign women, by which the manufacture of needlework 6 of thread and silk, not as yet under stood, was introduced. These six women, probably Flemings, had brought over to England the cutwork or darning of the time, a work then unknown in this country. All authors, up to the present period, refer to the well-known act of Edward IV., 6 1463, in which the entry of “ laces, corses, ribans, fringes, de soie and de file, laces de file soie enfile,” &c. are prohibited, as the first mention of “lace” in the public records. The English edition of the “Foedera,”as well as the statutes at large, freely translate these words as laces of thread, silk, twined, laces of gold, &c.; and the various writers on commerce and manu factures have accepted the definition as “ lace,” without troubling themselves to examine the question. 7 Some even go so far as to refer to a MS. in the Harleian Library, 8 giving “ directions for making many sorts of laces, 9 which were in fashion in the times of King Henry VI. and Edward IV.,” as a proof that lace was already well known, and formed the occupation of the “ handcraftry ”—as those who gained their livelihood by manual occupation were then 4 In the statute 2 Ricli. II. = 1378, merchant strangers are allowed to sell in gross and in retail “ gold wire or silver wire,” and “ other such small ware.'’ Neither in this nor in the treaty 13 Rich. II. = 1390, between England, the Count of Flanders, and “ les bonnes Gentz des Trois bonnes villes des Flandres, Gand, Brugges et Ipre ” (see Rymer), is there any mention of lace, which, even if fabri cated, was of too little importance, as an article of commerce, to deserve mention save as other “ small wares.” 5 Pins not yet being in common use, any lace would be called “ work of the needle.” 6 3 Edw. IV. cap. iv. 7 “1463. John Barett bequeaths to ‘My Lady Walgrave, my musk ball of gold with pie and lace. “ ‘ Item, to John Eden, my o gr. of tawny silk with poynts of needle work,—opus punctatum’"—Bury Will and Inve,n- tories. 8 Bib. Hurl. 2320. 9 Such as “ Lace Bascon, Lace en- dented, Lace bordred oil both syde, yn o syde, pykke Lace bordred, Lace Condrak, Lace Dawns, Lace Piol, Lace covert, Lace coverte dobie, Lace compon coverte, Lace maskel, Lace cheyne brode, Las Cheveron, Lace Ounde, Grene dorge, Lace for Hattys,” &c. Another MS. of directions for making these same named laces is in the posses sion of the vicar of Ipsden, Oxfordshire, and has been examined by the author, through the kindness of the late Mr. W. Twopenny.
- Current page (TXT)
- METS file (XML)
- IIIF manifest (JSON)
- Show double pages
- Thumbnail Preview