About: Italy     Goto   Sponge   NotDistinct   Permalink

An Entity of Type : ecrm:E22_Man-Made_Object, within Data Space : data.silknow.org associated with source document(s)

Plain woven linen napkin, towel or cloth. Approximately 4 cm in from each end a band 10.5 cm wide has been inserted, woven in red silk and cream linen, with a reversible pattern in point repeat of pairs of winged lions flanking a castle, and other ornamental devices; it is bordered by two integral narrow floral bands. Both of the inserted woven strips are seamed, suggesting this may be their second or later use. The whole napkin is edged with a simple line of red silk embroidery.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Italy
rdfs:comment
  • Plain woven linen napkin, towel or cloth. Approximately 4 cm in from each end a band 10.5 cm wide has been inserted, woven in red silk and cream linen, with a reversible pattern in point repeat of pairs of winged lions flanking a castle, and other ornamental devices; it is bordered by two integral narrow floral bands. Both of the inserted woven strips are seamed, suggesting this may be their second or later use. The whole napkin is edged with a simple line of red silk embroidery. (en)
  • Linen cloths such as this with decorated bands may have had several functions in a household, including as towels to dry the hands when washed before eating, cupboard cloths on which vessels could be placed, and coverpanes. Coverpanes were the cloths used to cover the principal place setting of salt, trencher, knife, spoon and bread. A household book of 1605 describes their use : "The Yoeman of the Pantrie (is instructed)... to carrie the salte with the carvinge knife, clensing knife, and forke, and them to place upon the table in dewe order, with the bread at the salte, and then to cover the breade, with a fynne square clouth of cambricke, called a coverpaine (which is to bee taken of, the meate being placede on the table, and the lorde sette) by the carver and delivered to the pantler" (quoted by Mitchell, see refs). The size of coverpanes seems to have varied from between one and a quarter to one and three quarter yards in length (114 to 160 cm), and between three quarters and one and an eighth yards in width (69 to 103 cm). The larger coverpanes were presumably required to cover tall standing salts. (en)
  • Napkin 16th century Napkins were generally carried by servants, often draped over the shoulder. By the late sixteenth century the practice of providing each diner with an individual napkin started to develop. This beautiful example is embroidered with silk. Italy Woven silk and linen V&A: 234-1880 <b>NB: this label is incorrect - the napkin is of woven silk NOT embroidered with silk.</b> [5 Oct 2006 - 7 Jan 2007] (en)
  • Linen napkin with woven bands in red silk depicting lions and castles, 1500s (en)
  • Linen cloths such as this with decorated bands may have had several functions in a household, including as towels to dry the hands when washed before eating, cupboard cloths on which vessels could be placed, and coverpanes. Coverpanes were the cloths used to cover the principal place setting of salt, trencher, knife, spoon and bread. A household book of 1605 describes their use : "The Yoeman of the Pantrie (is instructed)... to carrie the salte with the carvinge knife, clensing knife, and forke, and them to place upon the table in dewe order, with the bread at the salte, and then to cover the breade, with a fynne square clouth of cambricke, called a coverpaine (which is to bee taken of, the meate being placede on the table, and the lorde sette) by the carver and delivered to the pantler". (en)
sameAs
dc:identifier
  • 234-1880
P3 has note
  • Plain woven linen napkin, towel or cloth. Approximately 4 cm in from each end a band 10.5 cm wide has been inserted, woven in red silk and cream linen, with a reversible pattern in point repeat of pairs of winged lions flanking a castle, and other ornamental devices; it is bordered by two integral narrow floral bands. Both of the inserted woven strips are seamed, suggesting this may be their second or later use. The whole napkin is edged with a simple line of red silk embroidery. (en)
  • Linen cloths such as this with decorated bands may have had several functions in a household, including as towels to dry the hands when washed before eating, cupboard cloths on which vessels could be placed, and coverpanes. Coverpanes were the cloths used to cover the principal place setting of salt, trencher, knife, spoon and bread. A household book of 1605 describes their use : "The Yoeman of the Pantrie (is instructed)... to carrie the salte with the carvinge knife, clensing knife, and forke, and them to place upon the table in dewe order, with the bread at the salte, and then to cover the breade, with a fynne square clouth of cambricke, called a coverpaine (which is to bee taken of, the meate being placede on the table, and the lorde sette) by the carver and delivered to the pantler" (quoted by Mitchell, see refs). The size of coverpanes seems to have varied from between one and a quarter to one and three quarter yards in length (114 to 160 cm), and between three quarters and one and an eighth yards in width (69 to 103 cm). The larger coverpanes were presumably required to cover tall standing salts. (en)
  • Napkin 16th century Napkins were generally carried by servants, often draped over the shoulder. By the late sixteenth century the practice of providing each diner with an individual napkin started to develop. This beautiful example is embroidered with silk. Italy Woven silk and linen V&A: 234-1880 <b>NB: this label is incorrect - the napkin is of woven silk NOT embroidered with silk.</b> [5 Oct 2006 - 7 Jan 2007] (en)
  • Linen napkin with woven bands in red silk depicting lions and castles, 1500s (en)
  • Linen cloths such as this with decorated bands may have had several functions in a household, including as towels to dry the hands when washed before eating, cupboard cloths on which vessels could be placed, and coverpanes. Coverpanes were the cloths used to cover the principal place setting of salt, trencher, knife, spoon and bread. A household book of 1605 describes their use : "The Yoeman of the Pantrie (is instructed)... to carrie the salte with the carvinge knife, clensing knife, and forke, and them to place upon the table in dewe order, with the bread at the salte, and then to cover the breade, with a fynne square clouth of cambricke, called a coverpaine (which is to bee taken of, the meate being placede on the table, and the lorde sette) by the carver and delivered to the pantler". (en)
P43 has dimension
P65 shows visual item
P138 has representation
P102 has title
  • Italy
is P106 is composed of of
is P41 classified of
is P108 has produced of
is rdf:subject of
is P129 is about of
is P24 transferred title of of
is crmsci:O8_observed of
Faceted Search & Find service v1.16.118 as of Aug 04 2024


Alternative Linked Data Documents: ODE     Content Formats:   [cxml] [csv]     RDF   [text] [turtle] [ld+json] [rdf+json] [rdf+xml]     ODATA   [atom+xml] [odata+json]     Microdata   [microdata+json] [html]    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3240 as of Aug 4 2024, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-musl), Single-Server Edition (126 GB total memory, 2 GB memory in use)
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2024 OpenLink Software