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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 XXXII. Devonshire
- 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
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356 HISTORY OF LACE. entries of the church registers still preserved at Honiton, 3 names all handed down to their descendants in the present generation, 4 and in these families the fabric has continued for along lapse of years. That the trade was already flourishing in the days of our first James, the oft cited brass inscription, let into a raised tombstone near the wall of old Honiton church, fully testifies :— “ Here lieth y e Body of James Rodge, of Honiton, in y e County of Devonshire, Bone lace seller, who hath given unto the poor of Honiton P’ishe the benyfite of 100Z. for ever, who deceased y e 27 July, a.d. 16 L7, ;etatis sum 50. Remember the Poore.” If any credit may be attached to the folk-lore of the lace-making trade, this James Rodge 5 was a valet, who, escaping from Brussels, first brought over the secret of the finer stitches as used in the Flanders laces of that period, Having made his fortune at Honiton, lie, in gratitude, bequeathed a sum of money to the poor of his adopted city. Westcote, too, who wrote about the year 1620, when noticing “ Honitoun,” says :—“ Here is made abundance of bone lace, a pretty toy now greatly in request.” 6 He does not speak of it as a new manufacture ; the trade had already taken root and flourished, for, including the above-mentioned Rodge, the three earliest bone- lace-makers of the seventeenth century on record all at their decease bequeathed sums of money for the benefit of their indigent townspeople, viz. Mrs. Minifie, 7 before mentioned, who died in 1617, and Thomas Humphrey of Honiton, laceman, who willed, in the year 1658, 20/. towards the purchase of certain tenements, a notice of which benefaction is recorded on a painted board above the gallery in the old parish church. 3 Bind, Genest, Riiymunds, Brock, Couch, Gerard, Murck, Stocker, May nard, Trump, Groot, &c. 4 Up to a recent date, the Honiton lace-makeis were mostly of Flemish origin. Mrs. Stocker, ob. 1769; Mr. J. Stocker, + 1783, and four daughters; Mrs. Mary Stocker, + 179-; Mr. Gerard + 1799, and daughter; Mrs. Lydia May nard (of Anti-Gallican celebrity), + 1786; Mrs. Ann Brock, + 1815; Mrs. Elizabeth Humphrey, + 1790, whoso family had been in the lace manufacture one hundred and fifty years and more. The above list has been furnished to the author by Mrs. Frank Abcrdein, whose grandfather was for many years in the trade. Mrs. Treadwin, of Exeter, found an old lacc-worker using a lace “ Turn ” for winding sticks, having the date 1678 rudely carved on the foot, showing how the trade was continued in the same families from generation to generation. 5 Rodge, or Ridge, with all due defer ence to Devonshire tradition, does not sound like a name of Flemish extraction. “ View of Devon,” T. Westcote. 7 Her bequest is called “Minifie’s Gift.”
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