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Peasant Clothing

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Sheepskin cloaks and woolen hats and mittens were worn in winter ... Sometimes clothes were garnished with silver, but only the wealthy could wear such items. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Peasant Clothing


1
Peasant Clothing
  • Peasant men wore stockings and tunics, while
    women wore long gowns with sleeveless tunics and
    wimples to cover their hair. Sheepskin cloaks and
    woolen hats and mittens were worn in winter for
    protection from the cold and rain. Leather boots
    were covered with wooden patens to keep the feet
    dry.

2
Outer and Under Garments
  • The outer clothes were almost never laundered,
    but the linen underwear was regularly washed. The
    smell of wood smoke that permeated the clothing
    seemed to act as a deodorant. Peasant women spun
    wool into the threads that were woven into the
    cloth for these garments.

3
Fur and Jewelry
  • Fur was often used to line the garments of the
    wealthy. Jewelry was lavish, much of it imported
    and often used as security against loans. Gem
    cutting was not invented until the fifteenth
    century, so most stones were not very lustrous.
    Ring brooches were the most popular item from the
    twelfth century on.

4
Love Conquers All
  • Chaucer's prioress in the Canterbury Tales wore a
    brooch with the inscription Amor vincit omnia
    (Love conquers all), not a particularly
    appropriate slogan for a nun.

5
Laws Governing Jewelry
  • Diamonds became popular in Europe in the
    fourteenth century. By the mid-fourteenth century
    there were laws to control who wore what jewelry
    , and knights were not permitted to wear rings.
    Sometimes clothes were garnished with silver, but
    only the wealthy could wear such items.

6
Health Hygiene
  • As the populations of medieval towns and cities
    increased, hygienic conditions worsened, leading
    to a vast array of health problems.

7
Medicine
  • Medical knowledge was limited and, despite the
    efforts of medical practitioners and public and
    religious institutions to institute regulations,
    medieval Europe did not have an adequate health
    care system. Antibiotics weren't invented until
    the 1800s and it was almost impossible to cure
    diseases without them.

8
Myths and Superstitions
  • There were many myths and superstitions about
    health and hygiene as there still are today.
    People believed, for example, that disease was
    spread by bad odors. It was also assumed that
    diseases of the body resulted from sins of the
    soul. Many people sought relief from their ills
    through meditation, prayer, pilgrimages, and
    other nonmedical methods.

9
Four Humors
  • The body was viewed as a part of the universe, a
    concept derived from the Greeks and Romans. Four
    humors, or body fliuds, were directly related to
    the four elements.
  • Fire yellow bile or choler
  • Water phlegm
  • Earth black bile
  • Air blood.
  • These four humors had to be balanced. Too much of
    one was thought to cause a change in
    personality--for example, too much black bile
    could create melancholy.

10
Bloodletting
  • Medicine was often a risky business. Bloodletting
    was a popular method of restoring a patient's
    health and "humors." Early surgery, often done by
    barbers without anesthesia, must have been
    excruciating.
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