Tudor Norwich - Norfolk Museums Service
Transcription
Tudor Norwich - Norfolk Museums Service
Tudor Norwich In Tudor times Norwich was a major walled city almost as big as London and nearly as populous. In 1570 it had a population of about 14,000. The layout of the streets was very similar to that of today but there was no development outside the city walls. Streets were usually identified by the inn on the nearest corner. There were no shops in the modern sense, only small shuttered counters facing the street where the shopkeeper displayed the goods that were made inside. Plague and fire were major hazards affecting the city. In 1507 a disastrous fire destroyed many of the medieval timber and thatch buildings. When rebuilding began afterwards much more brick, tile and glass was used. Most of Elm Hill was built at this time. Plague was endemic and broke out often. There was a major outbreak in 1579 which killed 6,000 people. Many blamed its appearance on the visit of Queen Elizabeth and her court in the previous year. The closing of the monasteries in 1539 meant that hospitals run by monks or nuns had ceased to exist. In 1570 the city authorities conducted a census of the poor, the first of its kind ever to be recorded. It revealed that 80% of the population was poor and 20% destitute. The corporation was keen to distinguish between the ‘idle poor’and the ‘unfortunate poor’. The City Bridewell (now the Bridewell Museum) was set up to give idle people useful work. Children as young as six were expected to knit or spin. A mere handful of people were rich and owned goods worth £100 or more. Amongst these were the mayor and aldermen of the city, all of whom were merchants, either grocers, drapers, mercers or textile merchants. The textile trade employed a majority of the population. Smooth woollen cloth of a kind called ‘worstead’, made from combed, long-staple wool, was exported all over Europe. In times of economic decline many people were put out of work. During a slump in 1565, the city mayor, Thomas Sotherton, invited 30 Flemish and Dutch weavers to settle in Norwich. The idea was to invigorate the ailing Norwich textile trade with new techniques from Holland which was already producing lighter fabrics made by combining wool with linen or silk. These Flemish weavers became known in the city as the ‘Strangers’. They were protestant refugees escaping religious persecution resulting from their country’s occupation by Spanish troops. Thomas Sotherton made the initial contact and Strangers’Hall is believed to have been a base for the incoming weavers, hence its name. The experiment was a success. By 1579 there were about 6,000 ‘Strangers’ resident in the city. They laid the foundation of ‘Norwich Stuffs’, smooth flowing fabrics woven in bright colours (often madder red) and finished by hot pressing to give a glossy surface. Over the next two centuries these fabrics went on to gain worldwide popularity. TRAIL WOR KSHEET STRANGERS’ HALL Welcome to the Great Hall at Strangers’ Hall. During the Tudor period, Strangers’ Hall was the home of the Sotherton family, wealthy merchants and Mayors of Norwich. DETAILS OF CONSTRUCTION The room you are now standing in was once used for eating, entertaining and sleeping! The front door, entrance porch, and the stairs you have just climbed were built during the reign of Henry VIII. When did Henry VIII begin his rule? (Circle one) 1305 1505 2005 Find the screen which separates the Great Hall from the front entrance. Can you see the four carvings along the top of it? One of them, which looks like a shield, is Nicholas Sotherton’s Merchant Mark (like a coat of arms). Which do you think it is? Draw Sotherton’s Merchant Mark! What is the screen made of? Solid carved oak. Sotherton made other additions to the Great Hall, such as the large bay window that looks onto the garden. This window is typical of the Tudor period. How is it different from the windows in your home? Many possible answers such as... Panes are much smaller. It’s not double glazed. It’s probably far larger and more elaborate. It’s a curved ‘bay’ shape (although this is still popular) its frame is wooden not plastic….. Glass was very expensive in Tudor England. Why do you think the panes of glass are so small? Small panes meant that if a pane was broken, only a small area needed to be replaced. Glass was very expensive, and this way costs were kept down. Continued on next page… The floor in many poorer Tudor homes would have been made of beaten earth and straw. What is the floor here made of? Ceramic tiles—typical of a wealthier home. Which type of floor would you prefer and why? Answers can take into account warmth, practicality, cost and personal preference! FOOD FOR THOUGHT LIFE IN A TUDOR TOWNHOUSE Tudor houses were poorly insulated and could be very draughty. Sotherton’s household would have had a charcoal brazier in the middle of the room to keep it warm. The two doors you see behind the reception desk are for the pantry and the buttery. The pantry was for storing solid food and the buttery for liquid food. The kitchen was probably outside to reduce risk of fire! Because of the brazier, it is a good job the ceiling is so high! Can you think why? The brazier will give off smoke. Smoke rises, so will gather in the height of the ceiling, away from occupants, preventing them from breathing in the smoke etc. Only the wealthier homeowners had rugs or carpets in Tudor England. But they did not use them to cover the floor. Instead, rugs were used to cover tables and tapestries were hung on the walls. What sort of things do you hang on your walls at home? Variety of answers; wallpaper, posters, stencilling etc. Encourage children to understand how technology and skills have changed from weaving carpets to computer design etc. Find the Tudor carpet on the landing upstairs. It was made during the reign of Elizabeth I. How do we know when the carpet was made? The date is contained within the pattern. Can you find the aumbry? TUDOR FURNITURE Most Tudor homes were furnished very simply, with items made of very solid oak. The oldest piece of furniture in Strangers’ Hall is this cupboard called an ‘aumbry’ or ‘armoire’. It was made in the reign of Henry VII, the first Tudor king. Which of the following words could you use to describe it? light burned STRONG thin delicate lockable shelved panelled carved cracked HEAVY painted What clues tell you that it was used to store valuable items? Heavy locks can be seen attached to the front of the aumbry. It is also likely that at another time it was used for storing food; hence the vents which have been carved out of the front. What other furniture can you find in the Great Hall that is made of oak? Draw some below. The furniture in the Great Hall often changes, but a variety of pieces are likely to be seen such as the long table and stalls and the chest by the screen near the front door. Tudor people used chests, like those in the Great Hall, for storing their clothes and household items. Where do you keep your clothing at home? Wardrobes, chest or drawers etc. The chests used for storage in Tudor times doubled up as seats. Do you think oak furniture would be comfortable to sit on? Encourage children to make comparisons between sitting comfortably on a sofa, and perching on an oak chest or stall. Continued on reverse… Well done for reaching the end of the Strangers’ Hall trail! Just one more task to complete. Find this Tudor portrait of Elizabeth Buxton. Can you dress her in modern clothes? This portrait should be found on the wall opposite the window in the Great Hall. TRAIL WOR KSHEET STRANGERS’ HALL Welcome to the Great Hall at Strangers’ Hall. During the Tudor period, Strangers’ Hall was the home of the Sotherton family, wealthy merchants and Mayors of Norwich. DETAILS OF CONSTRUCTION The room you are now standing in was once used for eating, entertaining and sleeping! The front door, entrance porch, and the stairs you have just climbed were built during the reign of Henry VIII. When did Henry VIII begin his rule? (Circle one) 1305 1509 2005 Find the screen which separates the Great Hall from the front entrance. Can you see the four carvings along the top of it? One of them, which looks like a shield, is Nicholas Sotherton’s Merchant Mark (like a coat of arms). Which do you think it is? Draw Sotherton’s Merchant Mark! What is the screen made of? Sotherton made other additions to the Great Hall, such as the large bay window that looks onto the garden. This window is typical of the Tudor period. How is it different from the windows in your home? Glass was very expensive in Tudor England. Why do you think the panes of glass are so small? Continued on next page… The floor in many poorer Tudor homes would have been made of beaten earth and straw. What is the floor here made of? Which type of floor would you prefer and why? FOOD FOR THOUGHT LIFE IN A TUDOR TOWNHOUSE Tudor houses were poorly insulated and could be very draughty. Sotherton’s household would have had a charcoal brazier in the middle of the room to keep it warm. The two doors you see behind the reception desk are for the pantry and the buttery. The pantry was for storing solid food and the buttery for liquid food. The kitchen was probably outside to reduce risk of fire! Because of the brazier, it is a good job the ceiling is so high! Can you think why? Only the wealthier homeowners had rugs or carpets in Tudor England. But they did not use them to cover the floor. Instead, rugs were used to cover tables and tapestries were hung on the walls. What sort of things do you hang on your walls at home? Find the Tudor carpet on the landing upstairs. It was made during the reign of Elizabeth I. How do we know when the carpet was made? Can you find the aumbry? TUDOR FURNITURE Most Tudor homes were furnished very simply, with items made of very solid oak. The oldest piece of furniture in Strangers’ Hall is this cupboard called an ‘aumbry’ or ‘armoire’. It was made in the reign of Henry VII, the first Tudor king. Which of the following words could you use to describe it? light burned STRONG thin delicate lockable shelved panelled carved cracked HEAVY painted What clues tell you that it was used to store valuable items? What other furniture can you find in the Great Hall that is made of oak? Draw some below. Tudor people used chests, like those in the Great Hall, for storing their clothes and household items. Where do you keep your clothing at home? Do you think oak furniture would be comfortable to sit on? Continued on reverse… Well done for reaching the end of the Strangers’ Hall trail! Just one more task to complete. Find this Tudor portrait of Elizabeth Buxton. Can you dress her in modern clothes? Tudor Dining Contrary to popular opinion, the Tudors had an elaborate code of table manners; so much so that the most popular books of the period were those on etiquette. For the wealthy, dining was a very formal occasion governed by a fierce social hierarchy. The most important diners sat at the top table and guests were ranked out at the adjoining tables in strict order of precedence. Meals were served in a number of courses or ‘removes’. Each course consisted of both sweet and savoury dishes which came to the table in large communal dishes from which the diners helped themselves. There might be, for example, joints of meat, roast fowl, pottage, spiced fruits, jellies and pies both sweet and savoury. The wealthier the household, the greater variety of dishes, and the more courses, were served. Diners ate with a knife or a spoon. Forks did not come into common use until about 1700. Guests would bring their own knives but the host would supply the spoons. Each place was set with a plate or ‘trencher’and guests ate with their fingers or the spoon. It was very bad manners to eat from the knife. Before and after the meal, and sometimes between courses, diners washed their hands. This was done in a small basin at the table into which a servant poured warm water from a jug or ‘ewer’. Ewers and basins were status symbols and might be made of pewter or silver. Another servant offered a towel to dry the hands. Each diner had a large napkin, usually worn by men over the left shoulder and by women, the left forearm. This was used to protect the clothes from grease spots and to wipe fingers and mouths before drinking from the communal cup. In a wealthy household the napkins and tablecloths, known collectively as ‘napiery’, would be of fine linen and another occasion to show off wealth and status. Plates were of pewter or turned wood and there were pottery bowls for stew or sweet sauces. The wealthy drank from cups of pewter or silver or, better still, from drinking glasses which were becoming more affordable by 1600. The poor drank from wooden ‘mazers’or horn beakers. For all classes, the diet was heavy on protein and consisted largely of meat, fish and bread. Vegetables, known collectively as ‘herbs’, were regarded as little more than a garnish. The poor subsisted largely on fat pork and ‘pease porridge’. Everyone was obliged to refrain from eating meat on Fridays and during Lent. These were traditionally ‘fish fast days’on which large quantities of herrings, both fresh and smoked, were eaten. This was particularly the case in East Anglia which had the largest herring port in England at Great Yarmouth. White bread made from wheat and known as ‘manchet’was only eaten by the wealthy. The poor made do with barley or rye bread. Imported luxury goods became more common as the century progressed and included citrus fruits from the Mediterranean, spices from the East Indies, and potatoes and sugar from the Americas. Tudor clothes Tudor clothes were governed partly by fashion, as clothes are today, and partly by the ‘Laws of Apparel’, also known as Sumptuary Laws, which were designed to maintain the social hierarchy. These laid down the rules of who could wear which fabrics, colours and styles. Consequently, the social status of Tudor men and women was immediately recognisable by their garments. For example, apprentices and schoolchildren generally wore blue, and servants dressed in the livery of their masters. Furs, lace, luxury fabrics and the colour purple were reserved by law for the aristocracy. The commonest fabrics were linen and wool. Cotton was a little-used import. Silks and velvets commanded the highest prices and were mostly imported from Europe. Everyone wore linen next to the skin. Women wore a long shift or smock and men a long-tailed shirt. Drawers or underpants were almost unknown. Linen underwear had the advantage of being washable; outer garments were brushed but not laundered. Small boys and girls were dressed in skirts until the age of about 6 when boys were ‘breeched’. After that they wore clothes very similar to those of adults with a few concessions to comfort and ease of movement. Everyone wore hose or stockings which generally came over the knee and were secured by garters. Over their linen shirts men wore a doublet and breeches. In Elizabeth’s reign, short padded trunks became fashionable. The doublet was so named because the fabric was doubled, stiffened and sometimes quilted. The poor wore a simpler version. Sleeves were separate items that were pulled on and secured by laces or pins. For warmth, a cloak might be worn over the top. Women wore a corset or ‘body’over the shift to give them a fashionable shape. If they were wealthy they might wear a ‘farthingale’stiffened by hoops of cane or rope to give a bell shape to their skirts. Over this came the petticoat and then the ’kirtle’which consisted of a skirt and laced-up bodice. Poor women had laces at the front that they could fasten themselves; the wealthy had back-lacing that a servant would fasten. Modesty demanded a neckerchief called a ‘partlet’to cover the throat. Sleeves were put on last, sometimes with decorative cuffs. The wealthy might add embroidered panels and rich trimmings and a loose coat or gown over the whole outfit. Working women and servants generally wore an apron during the day to give some protection to their clothes. The fashionable collar was the ruff which was of elaborately pleated linen that was stiffened with starch or even wired into shape. Everyone wore a hat. Women wore a linen cap or coif over which they pinned a headdress; men wore a flat felted cap called a bonnet. Hooks and eyes, buttons and laces were the commonest fastenings but quantities of pins were also used, especially in women’s dress. All cloth was hand-spun and hand-woven and consequently expensive. It was never thrown away. Worn garments were taken apart and re-fashioned and clothes were often bequeathed in wills to other members of the family. The line drawings and images are all of authentic Tudor clothing that is in the collection at the Carrow House Costume and Textile Centre. It is very rare for original Tudor items to survive. Carrow House offers a unique facility for studying costume and textiles. For more information about the centre, please look on the website: www.museums.norfolk.gov.uk