Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Dedication
- 1 Archaeology and the Life Course
- 2 Experiencing Age: the Medieval Body
- 3 Clothing the Body: Age, Sexuality and Transitional Rites
- 4 The Medieval Household: the Material Culture of Everyday Life
- 5 The Medieval Church and Cemetery: The Quick and the Dead
- 6 Medieval Lives: People and Things
- Appendix 1 The Medieval Ages of Man: natural, humoral, temporal and material associations of age
- Appendix 2 Excavated Medieval Cemeteries Discussed in the Text
- Appendix 3 Indicative Age Profiles Based on Excavated Medieval Cemeteries
- Appendix 4 Children's Clothing and Dress Accessories from Burial Contexts in Britain: infants to 15-year olds
- Appendix 5 Sexual Signs: medieval dress accessories incorporating sexual imagery
- Appendix 6 Dress Accessories Associated with May Festivities
- Appendix 7 Love Gifts: dress accessories associated with courting and betrothal
- Appendix 8 Apotropaic Materials: dress accessories, domestic and devotional objects
- Appendix 9 Charms: devotional inscriptions on excavated objects and dress accessories
- Appendix 10 Devotional Inscriptions on Medieval Finds from the Portable Antiquities Scheme
- Appendix 11 Priests' Burials from Medieval English Parish Churches and Hospitals
- Appendix 12 Grave Goods associated with Aged Skeletons from Medieval English Parish Churches and Hospitals
- Appendix 13 The Classification of Grave Goods from Medieval Burials
- Appendix 14 Infant Burials from Domestic Contexts in Medieval England
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Clothing the Body: Age, Sexuality and Transitional Rites
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Dedication
- 1 Archaeology and the Life Course
- 2 Experiencing Age: the Medieval Body
- 3 Clothing the Body: Age, Sexuality and Transitional Rites
- 4 The Medieval Household: the Material Culture of Everyday Life
- 5 The Medieval Church and Cemetery: The Quick and the Dead
- 6 Medieval Lives: People and Things
- Appendix 1 The Medieval Ages of Man: natural, humoral, temporal and material associations of age
- Appendix 2 Excavated Medieval Cemeteries Discussed in the Text
- Appendix 3 Indicative Age Profiles Based on Excavated Medieval Cemeteries
- Appendix 4 Children's Clothing and Dress Accessories from Burial Contexts in Britain: infants to 15-year olds
- Appendix 5 Sexual Signs: medieval dress accessories incorporating sexual imagery
- Appendix 6 Dress Accessories Associated with May Festivities
- Appendix 7 Love Gifts: dress accessories associated with courting and betrothal
- Appendix 8 Apotropaic Materials: dress accessories, domestic and devotional objects
- Appendix 9 Charms: devotional inscriptions on excavated objects and dress accessories
- Appendix 10 Devotional Inscriptions on Medieval Finds from the Portable Antiquities Scheme
- Appendix 11 Priests' Burials from Medieval English Parish Churches and Hospitals
- Appendix 12 Grave Goods associated with Aged Skeletons from Medieval English Parish Churches and Hospitals
- Appendix 13 The Classification of Grave Goods from Medieval Burials
- Appendix 14 Infant Burials from Domestic Contexts in Medieval England
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
‘Social skins’: medieval clothing
Clothing is the key signifier of age and other aspects of personal identity: it transforms and extends the corporeal body as a ‘social skin’ (Turner 1993). Clothing is defined here to include not just articles of dress, but hair treatments, jewellery and badges attached to apparel, and items that are suspended or wrapped around the body, comprising belts, girdles, purses, pouches, scabbards and their contents. Dress was integral to embodiment and to the ‘gestural culture’ of the Middle Ages, which judged the quality of the person and their soul on the basis of posture, movement and comportment (Schmitt 1991). Medical ideas about the body also influenced how clothing and jewellery were worn: for example, wedding rings were placed on the leech or healing finger that was believed to hold a vein which flowed directly to the heart (Hindman 2007, 138). Dress punctuated the temporality of the medieval life course: the working clothes of ‘everyday time’ were subject to seasonal change, while ‘religious time’ was marked by the donning of ‘Sunday best’ or items of costume reserved for annual religious festivals and seasonal rites connected especially with youth. Clothing was central to the symbolism of rituals that marked life course transitions from birth to death and it expressed normative constructs of sexual identity that were deemed appropriate to distinct stages of the life course. Finally, the spiritual and apotropaic functions of clothing contributed to an individual sense of well-being (Schneider 2006, 204; after Mauss 1990).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Medieval LifeArchaeology and the Life Course, pp. 68 - 113Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012