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ContributorThe Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives-
AuthorJohn Munro-
Date2006-
Other Identifierhttp://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.578.2278-
Other Identifierhttp://www.helsinki.fi/iehc2006/papers1/Munro.pdf-
URIhttps://www.amad.org/jspui/handle/123456789/70854-
DescriptionOver many millennia, mankind has laboured to consume and satisfy three very necessary material wants or needs: food (including drink), shelter, and clothing. Each of these, however, has also been major objects of luxury consumption. Textiles were necessities in providing almost all people with protection from the elements: from winter and evening cold, from summer heat, and from precipitation (rain, sleet, snow, hale); and also protection, in terms of modesty, from public shame and humiliation. For many people, however, clothing has also served and still serves other or supplementary wants, in terms of luxury consumption: for decoration, the assertion of personal values, and also for assertions or symbols of social status. The subject of this particular study, woollen textiles, is arguably the one that best permits a statistical comparison of market values of both luxury and ‘every-day ’ textiles, because of the abundance and continuity of price data that have survived in two economically linked regions, the southern Low Countries and England, over two centuries: from the mid-fourteenth to the mid-sixteenth centuries. Luxury- quality textiles from this region played a very major role in European international trade during this long period, for reasons also examined in this study. The core of this study is a comparison of the prices and relative values of the purchases of two luxury woollen textiles and of two relatively cheap textiles in Ghent, Mechelen, and Antwerp in the years 1538 to-
Formatapplication/pdf-
Languageeng-
RightsMetadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it.-
Dewey Decimal Classification940-
TitleLuxury and Ultra-Luxury Consumption in Later Medieval and Early Modern European Dress: Relative Values of Woollen Textiles in the Low Countries and England, 1330- 1570-
Typetext-
AMAD ID568329-
Year2006-
Open Access1-
Appears in Collections:BASE (Bielefeld Academic Search Engine)
General history of Europe


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