Reigned twenty-two years:
1377-1399.
Born 1366. Married, 1381,
Anne of Bohemia; 1395,
Isabella of France.
THE MEN
The King himself was a leader of fashion;
he had by grace of Nature the form, face, and manner
which go to make a dandy. The nobles followed
the King; the merchants followed the nobles after their
kind; the peasants were still clothed in the simplest
of garments, having retained the Norman tunic with
the sleeves pushed back over the wrist, kept the loose
boots and straw gaiters, and showed the improvement
in their class by the innovation of gloves made as
a thumb with a pouch for the fingers, and pouches
for money of cloth and leather hung on a leather belt.
This proved the peasant to be a man of some substance
by need of his wallet. Everyone wore the chaperon a
cap and cape combined.
We have now arrived at the reign which
made such a difference to the labourer and workman such
as the blacksmith and miller and in consequence
altered and improved the character of his clothes.
The poll-tax of 1380 brought the labourer into individual
notice for the first time, and thus arose the free
labourer in England and the first labour pamphlets.
We have two word-pictures of the times
of the greatest value, for they show both sides of
the coin: the one by the courtly and comfortable
Chaucer, the other by Long Will William
Langland, or Piers the Plowman. Picture the two
along the Strand Long Will singing his
dirges for hire, and Chaucer, his hand full of parchments,
bustling past.
One must remember that, as always,
many people dressed out of the fashion; that many
men still wore the cotehardie, a well-fitting garment
reaching half-way down the thigh, with tight sleeves
coming over the hand, decorated with buttons under
the sleeve from the elbow to the little finger.
This garment had a belt, which was placed round the
hips; and this was adorned in many ways: principally
it was composed of square pieces of metal joined together,
either of silver, or enamel in copper, or of gold
set with precious stones.
The cotehardie was generally made
of a pied cloth in horizontal or diagonal bars, in
silk or other rich fabric. With this garment the
chaperon (to be more fully described) was worn as a
hood; the legs were in tights, and the feet in pointed
shoes a little longer than the foot. A pouch
or wallet depended from the belt, and a sheath containing
two daggers, an anelace, and a misericorde. The
pouch was a very rich affair, often of stamped gilded
leather or sewn velvet ornamented, in fact,
according to the purse of the wearer. In winter
such a man as he of the cotehardie would wear an overcoat
with an attached hood. This coat was made in
various forms: one form with wide sleeves the
same width all the way down, under which were slits
in the coat to enable the wearer to place his hands
inside, as in the modern Raglan coat-pocket.
Another form was made very loose and without sleeves,
but with the same slits at the side; it was buckled
round the waist on occasion by a broad leather belt,
very plain. The common heavy travelling-coat
was made in this way, and it was only the very fashionable
who wore the houppelande for riding or travelling.
Sometimes such a man would wear in winter about the
town a cloak fastened over the right shoulder with
three or four buttons, leaving the right arm free;
such a cloak is seen in the brass of Robert Attelathe,
Mayor of Lynn.
In travelling, our gentleman would
wear, often in addition to his chaperon, a peaked
hat of cloth, high in the crown, with a brim turned
up all round, ending in a long peak in front the
same hat that we always associate with Dick Whittington.
His gloves would be of leather, often
ornamented with designs on the back, or, if he were
a knight, with his badge.
On this occasion he would wear his
sword in a baldric, a long belt over his right shoulder
and under his left arm, from which hung also his daggers.
Although I am not dealing even with personal arms,
one must remember, in representing these people, that
daggers were almost as necessary a part of dress as
boots or shoes, and that personal comfort often depended
upon a skilful use of that natty weapon; the misericorde
was used to give the coup de grace.
The farmer in harvest-time wore, if
he did not wear a hood, a peaked hat or a round, large-brimmed
straw hat.
We may now arrive at the fashionable
man, whose eccentricities in clothes were the object
of much comment. How the houppelande or
pelicon actually was originated I do not know, but
it came about that men suddenly began to clothe themselves
in this voluminous and awkward garment. It was
a long loose-fitting robe, made to fit on the shoulders
only, having very long loose sleeves, varying according
to the whim of the owner. These sleeves were
cut at the edges into the forms of leaves or other
designs, and were lined, as the houppelande,
with fur or silk. It will be seen that such a
garment to suit all weathers and temperatures must
be made of various materials and lined accordingly.
These materials were almost invariably powdered with
badges or some other device, sometimes with a flowing
pattern embracing an heraldic design or motto.
The sleeves turned back disclosed the sleeve of a
cotehardie underneath, with the little buttons running
from the elbow to the first knuckle of the little
finger. The houppelande had a very high collar,
coming well up to the middle of the back of the head;
it was buttoned up to the chin in front, and the collar
was often turned down half-way, the two top buttons
being left undone. It was fastened about the middle
by a thin leather belt, very long; this was buckled,
and the long end turned under and brought over to
hang down; the end was ornamented with many devices figures
of saints, heraldic figures, or other ornaments.
Sometimes the entire belt was sewn with small devices
in precious metal or enamels.
Now, to be in the height of fashion,
one either wore the houppelande extremely long
in the skirt or extremely short so short,
in fact, as to leave but a frill of it remaining below
the waist leaving the sleeves still their
abnormal length. Pretty fads, as tying a dagger
round the neck, or allowing it to hang low between
the legs, or placing it in the small of the back,
were much in vogue.
Every form of beard or moustache was
used, and the hair was worn long to the nape of the
neck. By the dandy it was elaborately pressed
and curled at the ends. Bands of real or artificial
flowers encircled the heads of the dandies, the artificial
flowers made in enamels or gold. Rings were worn
of great size on thumb and finger; long staffs with
elaborate heads were carried.
Under the houppelande was the
skirt and the cotehardie of thin material, and on
the legs hose, pied or powdered, made of silk or cloth
cut to the form and sewn.
The shoes were of great length, with
long points; rarely we find examples of the absurd
fashion of wearing the points so long that they were
tied back to the knees, but often they were so long
that the points came out 6 inches beyond the toe.
They were made of every material, sewn with pearls
on cloth or velvet, stamped with gold on leather,
or the leather raised. The toes were sometimes
stuffed hard, sometimes allowed to hang limp.
For walking in the streets high clogs
of wood were used, made with long pointed ends to
support the shoes.
I may add that the hose were gartered
below the knee to hold them taut with rich garters,
but if a man were a Garter Knight he wore but the
garter of his Order.
Much in favour with this court of
gallants were rich chains about the neck, having for
pendant their badge or some saint’s figure in
gold or silver.
Now we come to the most interesting
and universal fashion of wearing the chaperon, which
I am anxious to show in its various stages. It
began with a cape and a hood worn separately; these
were joined for convenience so that a man might put
on both at once. This fashion held for many years,
and then the fashionable man in search of novelty
caused the peak of the hood to be lengthened until
it grew to reach to his feet. Then he cast about
for a fresh mode for his head-wear, and so he twisted
the whole affair about his head, leaving the end of
the cape, which was jagged at the edge, protruding
like a cockscomb. Time went on, and he avoided
the trouble of tying this himself, so he had the hat
made up all ready tied, much in the manner of a turban.
Finally, the chaperon grew into disuse, and it remains
to-day a curious reminder in the cockade worn by coachmen
(it is almost a replica in miniature, with the round
twist and the jagged edge sticking up above the hat)
and on the cloaks of the Knights of the Garter, where
it is carefully made, and forms a cape on the right
shoulder, and in the present head-dress of the French
lawyer, a relic of the Middle Ages.
The chains worn about the neck remain
as badges of office in Mayors and Judges and in various
Orders.
The button worn by the members of
the Legion of Honour and other foreign Orders is,
I believe, an idea resulting from the cockade, which,
of course, was at the beginning the chaperon in the
colours of the servant’s lord.
When one knows a custom so well, one
is apt to leave out many things in describing it.
For example, the houppelande was open from the
bottom of the skirt to the knee in front or at the
side, and this opening was often cut or jagged into
shapes; also it was open all the way up the side of
the leg, and from the neck to the breast, and buttoned
over.
I have not remarked on the jester,
a member of many households, who wore an exaggeration
of the prevalent costume, to which bells were attached
at all points.
So was much good cloth wasted in vanity,
and much excellent time spent upon superfluities,
to the harm of the people; perhaps useful enough to
please the eye, which must have been regaled with all
these men in wonderful colours, strutting peacockwise.
The poor peasant, who found cloth
becoming very dear, cared not one jot or tittle for
the feast of the eye, feeling a certain unreasonable
hunger elsewhere.
And so over the wardrobe of Dandy
Richard stepped Henry, backed by the people.
THE WOMEN
If ever women were led by the nose
by the demon of fashion it was at this time.
Not only were their clothes ill-suited to them, but
they abused that crowning glory, their hair.
No doubt a charming woman is always
charming, be she dressed by woad or worth; but to
be captivating with your eyebrows plucked out, and
with the hair that grows so prettily low on the back
of the neck shaved away was it possible?
I expect it was.
The days of high hennins was
yet to come; the day of simple hair-dressing was nearly
dead, and in the interval were all the arts of the
cunning devoted to the guimpe, the gorgieres, the mentonnières,
the voluminous escoffions.
At this time the lady wore her hair
long and hanging freely over her shoulders; her brows
were encircled by a chaplet, or chapel of flowers,
real or artificial, or by a crown or plain circlet
of gold; or she tucked all her hair away under a tight
caul, a bag of gold net enriched with precious stones.
To dress hair in this manner it was first necessary
to plait it in tight plaits and bind them round the
head, then to cover this with a wimple, which fell
over the back of the neck, and over this to place
the caul, or, as it was sometimes called, the dorelet.
Now and again the caul was worn without the wimple,
and this left the back of the neck exposed; from this
all the hair was plucked.
For outdoor exercises the lady would
wear the chaperon (explained in the previous chapter),
and upon this the peaked hat.
The poorer woman wore always the hood,
the wimple tied under the chin, or plain plaited hair.
One must remember always that the
advance of costume only affected the upper classes
in the towns, and that the knight’s lady in the
country was often fifty years behind the times in
her gowns. As an instance of this I give the
fur tippet hung with bells, used when hawking.
In the early part of the reign the
cotehardie was the universal woman’s garment.
It was made in two ways: the one a simple, well-fitting
garment, skirts and bodice in one, buttoned in front,
with neck well open, the skirts ample and long, the
sleeves over the hands to the first joints of the
fingers, and ornamented with buttons from the elbow
to the little finger this was the general
form of the garment for all degrees of rank.
The lady enriched this with a belt like a man’s,
narrow in width round the waist with hanging end, or
broad round the hips and richly ornamented. The
other form of cotehardie was exactly as the man’s,
ending short below the hips, under which was worn
the petticoat.
The winter addition to these was the
surcoat (as usually worn by a knight over his armour);
this was often lined with fur. The surcoat was
a long garment without sleeves, and with a split down
the sides from the shoulder to the top of the thigh;
through this split was seen the cotehardie and the
hip-belt. The edges were trimmed with fur, and
very frequently ornamental buttons were worn down the
front.
Over the shoulders was the cloak,
left open in front, and fastened by means of a cord
of rich substance passing through two loops in the
backs of large ornamental studs; this cord was, as
a rule, knotted at the waist, the ends hanging down
as tassels.
Later in the reign, when the second
Queen of Richard had brought over many rich fashions,
the ladies adopted the houppelande, with its heavy
collar and wide, hanging sleeves. Every lady and
most women carried a purse in the hand or on the girdle,
ornamented according to their station.
The merchant’s wife wore, in
common with her maids, a white apron. The child
who was spinning a peg-top in the street was simply
dressed in a short-skirted cotehardie.
For riding and sport the woman was
dressed almost exactly as a man with houppelande
or heavy cloak buttoned on the right shoulder, hawking-glove
on her left hand with a bell or metal ball depending
from it. She wore boots laced up at the side,
or long boots of soft leather fastened with hook and
eye; shoes like a man’s, but not so pointed
and extreme. Sometimes for riding a big round
hat was worn over a hood.
In many cases the dresses were powdered
with the monogram of the Blessed Virgin, with badges
of the family or some small device, or they were ornamented
with a simple flowing pattern, or were plain.
All the fripperies of fashion lay
in pins for the wimple, the head made as a figure
of a patron saint; or girdles rich with precious stones;
or mirror-cases on whose ivory fronts were carved the
Castle of Love, or hunting scenes, or Calvary.
The clasps of purses were rich in design, and rings
of every kind were worn on every finger and upon the
thumb. Charms against evil were hung about the
neck or sewn into the clothes. No matter who
wrote, passed, and practised the many sumptuary laws,
still, one may know it to have been frequent for persons
owning less than L20 a year to wear gold and silver
ornaments, although expressly forbidden, and ladies
of a lower estate than wives of knights-banneret wore
cloth of gold and velvet, and gowns that reached and
trailed upon the ground, while their husbands braved
it in ermine and marten-lined sleeves which swept the
road.
The custom of wearing crowns was common
to all people of rank, as heraldic distinction of
crowns did not commence until the sixteenth century.
What a magnificent time for colour
was this reign! the rich houppelandes,
the furs, the long-piked shoes with pearls and gold
upon them, the massive chains about men’s necks;
ladies whose heads shone with rich caps and cauls
of pearl-embroidered gold, the rich-sheathed baselard
stuck in the girdle or hanging from it on a silver
chain. Even the poor begging friar was touched
by all this finery, and, forgetful of the rules of
Saint Francis, he made great haste to convert his
alms into a furred cote ’cutted to the knee and
quaintly buttoned, hose in hard weather fastened at
the ankle, and buckled shoes.’
Imagine that amazing woman the Wife
of Bath, in her great hat and pound-weight kerchief;
the carpenter’s wife in her gored apron, at her
girdle a purse of leather hanging, decorated with silk
tassels and buttons of metal.
It is almost impossible to describe
clearly the head-dresses the great gold
net bags which encased the hair for they
were ornamented in such different ways, always, or
nearly always, following some pattern in diaper in
contrast to the patterns which came later when the
design followed such lines as are formed by wire-netting,
while later still the connecting-thread of the patterns
was done away with and the inside decoration alone
remained.
Well, Richard the King no longer can
whistle to Matthew, his favourite greyhound, and Anne
the Queen lies stately in the Abbey at Westminster
without solace of her little lap-dog; but we are not
all modern in our ways, and ladies hang charms about
them, from scarabs to queer evil eye coral hands,
from silver shoes to month-stones. Crowns of flowers
have been worn and crowns of jewels too, just as men
and women wore them then, except on Fridays and the
eves of fêtes.
These things we do, and other ancient
things beside, but let us hope that Fashion has lost
her cruel mood, and deems it wise to leave our ladies’
eyebrows where they be, nor schemes to inspire her
faithful devotees with mad desires to hide their hair
and shave their napes.
The crinoline is threatened let
it come; sandals are here, with short hair and the
simple life, but leave me, I pray thee, royal dame,
an eyebrow on my lady, if only to give occupation
to the love-lorn sonneteer.