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Issue 28 June 2001
Complex Weavers’
ISSN: 1531-1910
Medieval Textiles
Coordinator: Nancy M McKenna 507 Singer Ave. Lemont, Illinois 60439 e-mail: nmckenna@mediaone.net
In this issue:
Woven “Viking” Wall Hanging
p.1
Woven “Viking” Wall Hanging
By Jacqueline James, York 2001
Medieval Color and Weave Textiles
p.1
Hangings About The Hall
p.3
One of the most interesting custom orders I have ever
undertaken was in 1989 when I was approached by
Heritage Projects Ltd. and asked to weave a wall
hanging for permanent display in one of the recon-
structed houses at the Jorvik Viking Centre,
Coppergate, York.
The Discovery of Woad Pigment
p.7
A Renaissance Cheese
p.7
Trade Cloaks
p.8
Medieval Color & Weave Textiles
by Nancy M. McKenna
Research for the project began with consultation with
Penelope Walton Rogers at the textile conservation
lab of York Archeological Trust. I was privileged to
see some of the results of Penelope’s research of
textile fragments from Coppergate Viking-age site.
Color has always been important to people. As noted
in Textiles and Clothing, plaids are not uncommon in
Figure 1: From Textiles & Clothing,
Fabric #172. Only madder was
detected on this cloth, the background
being pink and the stripes being near balck. Because
of waterlogged conditions, it is suggested that the
background may have been origionally undyed. Late
14 c.
One of the woven fragments I examined was thought
to have originated from a curtain or wall hanging. The
sample, wool twill 1263 , was used as a reference to
determine the fiber content, weave structure, sett and
dye I would use to produce the woven fabric. Al-
though the piece has two adjacent hemmed sides, and
is not square, it is easily seen that it has been pulled
out of square by hanging from the corner and other
points along one edge, an indication of it having been
used as a wall hanging or curtain. Another interesting
feature of this textile is a single s thread that turns
back upon itself to create a gore in the fabric. This is
indicative of being woven on a warp-weighted loom
where no spacing device is used to keep the warp
evenly distributed. Because this gore can only occur
in the weft, it also indicated the direction of the warp,
which is a Z spun system.
The completed wall hanging measured 45” x 75” and
was made with 5s Z-twist wool yarn dyed red with
madder root. I dyed the yarn prior to the weaving
process. The structure used was balanced 2/2 twill
with a 12 epi sett. As I do not have a warp weighted
loom, commonly used during the Viking era, the
weaving was done on my Glimakra countermarche
loom. The finished fabric was washed, but not fulled.
A small hem was hand stitched along all four sides.
the medieval period. They have been found in many
areas of Europe, and even in China. As a general rule,
older textiles are generally woven in 2/2 twill, and
later textiles in tabby. Diamond twills often use color
in one direction and another in the other to show the
pattern formed by the weaving. Textiles woven in
cont’d on page 2
Cont’d on page 6
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Complex Weavers’ Medieval Textile Study Group
Color & Weave cont’d from page 1
Slavic nations were more likely to have warp or weft
dominant stripes in color.
Hems and cuffs from clothing are areas most likely to
have a color and weave pattern, even if the rest of the
garment is solid in color.
Figure 5: Textiles
& Clothing cloth
sample #7. 36
threads per inch in
both warp and
weft, woven of
worsted singles.
Colors are those of
natural dark and
light wool.
Figure 2:
Textiles &
Clothing, cloth
sample #275.
Pink and
Black, madder
is the only dye
detected. Late
14 c.
Figure 3: From Textiles &
Clothing, cloth sample #38, #329
& #159. Worsted, fine (merino
range) to medium wool. This
cloth was used to line buttoned
garments the outer fabric of each
was coarser. Range of thread
count is 8 to 28 threads/cm. In the
case of textile #329 this wool was
used as the outer cloth as well as
the lining.
Figure #6: Textiles &
Clothing cloth sample #9.
Natural and madder dyed
wool.
Earlier clothing was constructed of squares of cloth as
woven, with seams along selveges, and gores added
for ease of movement (for example, the woman’s
costume from Huldremose, 2nd Century AD in the
Danish National Museum). And who can forget
Boadicea who is described by the Roman historian
Cassius Dio thusly:
“In person she was very tall, with the most sturdy figure
and a piercing glance; her voice was harsh; a great mass
of yellow hair fell below her waist and a large golden
necklace clasped her throat; wound about her was a tunic
of every conceivable color [possibly plaid] and over it a
thick chlamys...” (Payne, Blanche: History of Costume,
1965)
Figure 4: Textiles & Clothing cloth sample #64. Colors
are natural, madder dyed red, and a darker color, dye
material unknown. This pattern is found as early as the
6th and 7th C but in twills. Originally a firmly woven
cloth that did not ravel when cut, this sample was part of
a buttoned sleeve.
Later clothing was often constructed on the bias.
Thought to be a symptom of conspicuous consump-
tion by the upper classes, this construction method is
shown more in images than found in samples, al-
though the small size of samples found in the archeo-
logical record may make judgement calls as to which
direction the cloth was oriented in a garment difficult.
Color & Weave cont’d on page 6
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Issue 28 June 2001
‘THE HANGINGS ABOUT THE HALL’ :
An Overview of Textile Wall Hangings in Late
Medieval York, 1394-1505
By Dr. Charles Kightly
His ‘York hall’ displayed a complete ‘halling’ set in
matching blue ‘say’ cloth (for textile definitions see
below). This comprised a ‘dorser’ (hung ‘at the back’ -
ad dorsum - of the high table) thirteen yards long by
four yards deep, with two ‘costers’ (for the side walls)
each nine yards long by two and a half yards deep. One
bench was draped with a matching blue ‘banker’ (lined
with canvas, perhaps to stop it slipping) eight yards long
and twenty-seven inches deep, and equipped with ten
matching feather-filled cushions: even the hall cupboard
had a matching blue say ‘cupboard cloth’. All this blue
was set off by a contrasting red say banker, more
valuable than the rest and thus perhaps used to drape
the high table benching. The complete halling was valued
at £2 12/10d, and in addition Duffield owned a set of
matching ‘worsted’ hangings in blue (clearly his
favourite colour) for his ‘principal bedchamber’, valued
at 9/10d, and a third set of red worsted hangings, valued
at nearly £1, for his second chamber’.
Introduction
This brief survey attempts to answer some of the
questions I have been asked about wall hangings in late
medieval York houses: who owned them; which rooms
were they used in; how were they hung; what were they
made of, what did they look like, and how much did
they cost? It deals essentially with the fifteenth century,
and draws mainly on three collections of York manuscript
archives: the Dean and Chapter Wills in York Minster
Library [A in text references], and the Dean and Chapter
Inventories [B] and the Diocesan Will Registers [C] in
the Borthwick Institute of Historical Research. Its
concern is domestic wall-hangings and -where these
formed part of a ‘room-set’ - related textile accessories
like ‘bankers’ (seat covers) and cushions: domestic bed-
hangings and hangings in churches are excluded. Even
within its remit, moreover, the survey does not claim to
be comprehensive.
The three sets of hangings bequeathed by Agnes Selby
(d. 1464 A.) - to take another example from the upper
end of the scale - were probably rather more costly,
though their value is not recorded. The ‘best’ set included
hangings, banker and six cushions all of ‘ Arraswerke
(imported Flemish tapestry), while the second and third
sets ‘in red and green’ (cloth?) were accompanied,
intriguingly, by sets of cushions decorated ‘ cum
Werwolfes ’ - an unusual and perhaps rather disturbing
device, but doubtless useful conversation pieces.
Wall hangings are very frequently recorded in late
medieval York wills and inventories. This survey alone
covers more than fifty such documents (1394-1505)
which describe the colour, material, subject or size of
hangings, leaving aside many others where merely their
existence is noted. Their ownership spans the whole
range of the York ‘will-making classes’, from leading
citizens and wealthy clerics with multiple sets of
matching ‘hallings’ and ‘chamberings’ in tapestry or
fine wool, valued in pounds, down the single cheap
‘painted cloths’, worth a few pence, owned by modest
craftsmen or poor widows.
Agnes Selby belonged to a wealthy Lord Mayoral
dynasty, intermarried with the minor aristocracy: but
far less prosperous York citizens also owned complete
room-sets of hangings, even if these were in distinctly
inferior materials like ‘painted cloths’. The estate of
John Colan (d. 1490 B), a German-born goldsmith living
in rented property off Stonegate (near the restored
‘Barley Hall’), was for instance valued at less than £10
after payment of debts. Yet his small hall displayed a
set of four hangings ‘of green colour with flowers’ -
doubtless ‘painted cloths’, since their total value was
only 2/8d - together with three red (cloth?) bankers (value
10d) and a dozen ‘old red cushions’, at 1/6d. His
‘parlour’, meanwhile, had two individual hangings
(again doubtless painted cloths) depicting the Trinity
and ‘the images of St. George and the Virgin Mary’,
valued at only 3d each.
From the household inventories which furnish a room-
by-room breakdown of goods, it is clear that wall-
hangings were most frequently displayed only in the
‘hall’ or its equivalent, although in a few late cases they
are recorded only in the principal bedchamber. The
slightly better-off might afford hangings both in the hall
and a single bedchamber or ‘parlour’ - the most valuable
items being in the hall - while the wealthy possessed
complete sets of hangings for several bedchambers.
Among the most minutely described of these multiple
sets belonged to William Duffield (d. 1452), a wealthy
pluralist cleric who held canonries at Beverley and
Southwell as well as York Minister, his principal base.
The fact that the ‘appraisers’ conscientiously recorded
the exact dimensions of Colan’s hall hangings - an
admirable York practice - allows us at least to guess at
3
Complex Weavers’ Medieval Textile Study Group
how such modest pieces were arranged. Two of them
were each four yards and two three yards long, but they
were only four and a half feet deep, suggesting that they
were hung in strips above the raised backs of a fixed
bench running round three or four sides of a small room.
Canon Duffield’s seven and a half foot deep ‘costers’ -
given a higher room - may have been hung in the same
way, though his twelve foot deep ‘dorser’ perhaps
extended from ceiling to floor (fig. 1).
description and price suggest that these may have been
embroidered hangings, as may also have been Canon
Thomas Morton’s (d. 1448 B) green and red paled say
cloth hallings ‘with the arms of Archbishop Bowet’, or
his red say set ‘with the arms of St. Peter’. If so, the
embroidered heraldry may have been embroidered using
the ‘couching’ technique, and certainly the alderman’s
widow Matilda Danby (d. 1459 C) owned a ‘ couched
hallyng ’.
Such hangings - and even costly tapestries, as evidenced
by the perforations in surviving examples would
generally have been suspended from iron ‘tenterhooks’
driven into the wall, either by direct ‘snagging’ or via
rings sewn onto the fabric. York indeed possesses the
only contemporary illustration I know of this practice,
in panels A/2/2 and A/3/2 of the fifteenth century St.
William Window in the Minster north-east transept
(fig.2). There Roger of Ripon, mounted on a very
precarious ‘self-propping ladder’ is shown fixing up a
wall hanging as a stone block accidentally drops on his
head. He was however saved from death by the
miraculous intervention of St William, as the inscribed
block itself - now in the Minster undercroft - still survives
to prove.
Hangings of plain woollen cloth, however, were far more
common than either tapestry or embroidered hangings:
apart from painted cloths, indeed, they are the type most
often recorded in York documents. Occasionally (as in
William Duffield’s chamber) the fabric is called
‘worsted’, but generally it is called ‘say’, a light but
closely-woven woollen serge which (given some changes
in specification) remained universally popular for wall
and bed-hangings from the fifteenth until the mid
seventeenth century.
Say hangings might be of a single colour: Duffield’s
were mainly blue (an expensive colour to dye) but the
cheaper red and green are also often recorded. Very
popular, too, were hangings of ‘ paled say ’, woven in
‘pales’ or vertical stripes of equal width in two
contrasting colours, generally red and green. Such
hangings could be expensive. Archbishop Bowet’s (d.
1423) sumptuous new red and green paled halling set
was valued at over £8 - perhaps because it included
embroidered heraldry - but Thomas Baker’s (d. 1436
B) red and green halling was probably more typically
valued at only 5/-. Both Hugh Grantham (d. 1410 B)
and Hawise Aske (d. 1451 B) had paled hangings in
black and red, while those of John Crackenthorp esquire
(d. 1467 C) were more unusually ‘paled’ in three colours,
red, white and blue. This last, however, may perhaps
have been a painted cloth rather than a say hanging.
Tapestries, Embroidered Hangings and Woollen Says
The hanging shown in the St William window appears
to represent striped and damask-patterned silk brocade,
an expensive imported textile often depicted by
contemporary artists, but for which I have found no
evidence in York wills. There the most valuable hanging-
fabric mentioned was probably woven ‘ Arras ’ (like
Agnes Selby’s) or ‘ tapestry werk ’, and even this is
uncommon, probably because of its cost. A
contemporary inventory from outside York (that of the
very wealthy Sir Thomas Burgh of Gainsborough,
Lincolnshire, d. 1496, P. R. O. Probate 2/124) shows
that even low-grade tapestry had a second-hand value
of around 8d the yard, while a yard of figured ‘ imagery
werk ’ tapestry containing gold thread was valued at 2/-
or more. The complete set of hangings, bankers and
cushions ‘ de opere tapestre ’ belonging to the York
innkeeper Robert Talkan (d. 1415 B) must have been of
the cheaper sort, since it totalled only 33/4d. Even so, it
was valued at over twice the price of the red and blue
cloth set with which it shared his hall.
Painted cloths
In York, as throughout England, painted cloths were
much the most popular cheap wall hangings from the
late medieval period until the mid seventeenth century.
The earliest York reference I have found is to a painted
dorser belonging to John de Birne, rector of St.
Sampson’s, who died in 1394 (C). Their great attraction
was that they offered brightly coloured and often
figurative wall decoration - much cheaper to paint than
either to embroider or to work in tapestry - at a very low
cost. The shop stock of the York tailor John Carter (d.
1485 B), for example, included twelve yards of ‘ panetyd
The red hangings and bankers ‘with the arms of Lord
Hastings’ in Talkan’s chamber, conversely, was valued
at 66/8d, twice the price of his tapestries. Their
4
Issue 28 June 2001
clothes ’ at 2/8d, or only 2_d a yard, while that of the
chapman Thomas Gryssop (d. 1446 B) included six
whole painted cloths (admittedly ‘old’) at 5/- the lot.
Their cheapness, however, was counterbalanced by their
lack of durability: experiments with authentically
produced modem replicas have shown that they degrade
quite rapidly, especially when the painted surface is
cracked or damaged by rolling or folding for storage.
For this reason their second-hand value could be very
low indeed. The most expensive York example was
Richard Dalton’s (1505 B) complete painted hallings at
7/-, but their average second-hand value seems to have
been only one or two pence a yard, and two whole cloths
belonging to Henry Thorlthorp, vicar choral (d. 1427
B) were appraised at only a penny each.
Lyndesay (d. 1397 B), parish clerk of All Saints North
Street, which depicted ‘the image of Christ sitting in the
clouds’. John Underwode, clerk of the vestry at York
Minster (d. 1408 A), had a cloth ‘of the Last
Resurrection’, Henry Thorlthorp (d. 1427 B) and John
Danby (d. 1485 A), vicars choral, both had cloths ‘with
the Crucifix’; and cloths ‘with the Trinity’ are recorded
for the goldsmith John Colan (d. 1490 B); the widow of
Thomas Person (d. 1496 A), and John Clerk, chaplain
of St Mary Magdalen chapel (d. 1451 B), whose hanging
also depicted St. John the Baptist and St. John the
Evangelist. These two saints also appeared on a cloth
belonging to John Tidman, chaplain at All Saints, North
Street (d. 1458 C), who likewise owned painted hangings
with ‘a great image of the Virgin’ and with ‘the history
of the Five Joys of the Virgin’. Agnes del Wod (d. 1429
A) favoured images of St. Peter and St. Paul; William
de Burton, vicar of St. Mary Bishophill (d. 1414 A) had
a cloth with ‘the history of St. Thomas of Canterbury’;
and John Colan (d. 1490 B) one with ‘the Virgin Mary
and St. George’; while both John Kexby, Chancellor of
York Minster (d. 1452 B) and Janet Candell (d. 1479
C) owned cloths depicting ‘the Seven Works of Mercy’.
Secular subjects were seemingly much rarer, though the
vicar of Acomb, Henry Lythe (d. 1480 A) had a ‘halling
painted of Robyn Hude’.
The low value and ephemeral nature of painted cloths
has ensured a very low survival rate, and no indisputably
medieval English examples are known to exist. Analysis
of Elizabethan and later cloths carried out for ‘Barley
Hall’ - has however shown that they were generally made
of coarse linen canvas, thoroughly sized with animal-
skin size and then painted with inexpensive pigments
including red and yellow ochres, red lead, verdigris, lead
white, lamp black and ‘vegetable’ (weld) yellow. Stencils
may have been used for repeating patterns.
As elsewhere in England, York painted cloths seemingly
imitated more expensive types of hangings. Some were
painted in vertical stripes to resemble ‘paled says’, and
others imitated ‘boscage’ and ‘millefleurs’ tapestries.
Thus Alice Langwath (d. 1466 C) had a painted cloth
‘with roses’; John Colan (d. 1490 B) green cloths ‘with
flowers’; Thomas Baker (d. 143 6 B) two cloths ‘with
batylments’; Thomas Northus, vicar choral (d. 1449 A)
one ‘with an eagle in the middle’; William Coltman (d.
1481 B) two cloths ‘with certain birds’, and Richard
Dalton (d. 1505 B) one ‘with trees’.
Conclusion
A brief survey of the very rich archival resources surely
demonstrates that wall hangings and related textile
accessories were an important element of even quite
modest house interiors in York. Nor is there much reason
to doubt that a similar situation obtained in other
communities less blessed with surviving documentation.
It follows that such interiors were considerably more
comfortable and much more colourful than is even now
generally recognized or admitted. Thus the bare stone
walls or ‘wealth of exposed timbering’ which are still
the norm for modern representations of the later Middle
Ages - and for the great majority of medieval houses
displayed to the public - give a seriously false and
misleading impression of medieval domestic life.
More intriguing are the painted cloths which imitated
‘tapestry of imagery work’ by depicting figurative
religious subjects. Though particularly favoured by
poorer clerics, many of these were also owned by York
lay people, and the descriptions in the documents throw
welcome light on the domestic iconography of York
houses. We can only guess at their appearance, but it is
at least possible that some may have resembled in style
the illustrations in the Book of Hours locally produced
in c. 1430 for the Bolton family, and now in York Minster
Library (Add.MS.2).
Further reading
Though much has been written about tapestries proper,
lower-grade medieval hangings like those described here
have been little studied, and painted cloths scarcely at
all.
Crowfoot et al ., Textiles and Clothing c.1150-1450
(HMSO: Museum of London 1991) is the best technical
cont’d on page 6
Among the earliest described belonged to Robert
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