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Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
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n7https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/
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Statements

Subject Item
n2:611042cc-d958-35e8-9a78-f8379e491838
rdf:type
ecrm:E22_Man-Made_Object
rdfs:label
1615 / 1625, United Kingdom
rdfs:comment
Gloves could serve several purposes in early 17th century Britain, apart from the obvious ones of protection and warmth. Many were solely decorative, to display the wealth and status of their owner. They were worn in the hat or belt, as well as carried in the hand. Gloves were popular as gifts and were exchanged as a gesture of engagement or wedding present. In combat, a glove was thrown down as a gage, or challenge. Decorative gloves were popular with England’s working class. In 1618 Horatio Busini, chaplain to the Venetian ambassador to England, wrote disapprovingly in a report on English customs: “all wear very costly gloves. This fashion of gloves is so universal that even the porters wear them very ostentatiously.” The decoration of this pair is characteristic of the period 1615 to 1625 with couched embroidery in a stylised pattern and fringed cuff. A pair of kidskin gloves decorated at cuff with couched silver-gilt thread and purl, and pierced in a stylized floral pattern. The cuff is lined and edged with coral-pink silk. The lining in the left glove (A) is missing. The short yellow and coral silk fringes on each glove, each slightly different in pattern, bear the museum numbers 813-1875 and T281:N-1923 Pair of gloves, embroidered kidskin, 1615-1625, British; silver-gilt, pierced, yellow & coral fringe
owl:sameAs
n7:O159051
dc:identifier
319&A-1876
ecrm:P3_has_note
A pair of kidskin gloves decorated at cuff with couched silver-gilt thread and purl, and pierced in a stylized floral pattern. The cuff is lined and edged with coral-pink silk. The lining in the left glove (A) is missing. The short yellow and coral silk fringes on each glove, each slightly different in pattern, bear the museum numbers 813-1875 and T281:N-1923 Pair of gloves, embroidered kidskin, 1615-1625, British; silver-gilt, pierced, yellow & coral fringe Gloves could serve several purposes in early 17th century Britain, apart from the obvious ones of protection and warmth. Many were solely decorative, to display the wealth and status of their owner. They were worn in the hat or belt, as well as carried in the hand. Gloves were popular as gifts and were exchanged as a gesture of engagement or wedding present. In combat, a glove was thrown down as a gage, or challenge. Decorative gloves were popular with England’s working class. In 1618 Horatio Busini, chaplain to the Venetian ambassador to England, wrote disapprovingly in a report on English customs: “all wear very costly gloves. This fashion of gloves is so universal that even the porters wear them very ostentatiously.” The decoration of this pair is characteristic of the period 1615 to 1625 with couched embroidery in a stylised pattern and fringed cuff.
ecrm:P102_has_title
1615 / 1625, United Kingdom