Difference between revisions of "Caps, Scarves, Hoods and Hair nets"

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Revision as of 08:18, 14 April 2013


More Women's Clothing pages

Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 2 out of 5. Article structure and content is subject to change as data is still being collected.
Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 2 out of 5. Article structure and content is subject to change as data is still being collected.

Caps with hair showing [V]

A small cloth cap like those from York, Lincoln and Dublin
Art
--
Literature
--
Archaeology

  • York, England. 3 caps, all of silk.
  • Lincoln, England. 1 cap of silk.
  • Dublin, Ireland. 16 caps, 4 of silk and 12 of wool. 4 of these finds are only possibly from caps. [WINCOTT HECKETT 2003]
  • Dokkum, Netherlands. [BRANDENBURGH 2009: p.69-70] c.568-651AD?
  • Birka, Sweden. 1 cap of silk, Grave 946. Secured with a silver tablet woven band.

Discussion
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Headscarves

This style of head covering is frequently depicted in books and worn by re-enactors. To the best of our knowledge there is currently no real evidence for women wearing this style of head covering. Algren in his 1966 book 'The Viking' depicted almost all of his Viking women wearing this type of scarf. Algrem invented this head covering because he believed that "In those days a married woman had to cover her hair." [ALGREN 1966:p.201]. In the absence of any real evidence for head coverings he seems to derived this simple although probably inaccurate article and it has in turn been copied ever since.


Dublin scarf with hair showing

A number of small tasseled woven scarves of wool were found in Viking Age Dublin. The scarves range from 21-24cm wide and ?-? long.
Archaeology

  • Ireland, Dublin
    • 10 woolen scarves [WINCOTT HECKETT 2003:p.4]
    • 6 silk scaves [WINCOTT HECKETT 2003:p.4]

Discussion
Wincott Hecket has put forward a number of possible ways that these scarves may have been worn [WINCOTT HECKETT 2003:p.5].

[OWEN-CROCKER 2004: p.224]

Hoods


Hooded Cloaks

See Large head cloth

Sprang hair net (V)

Art
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Literature
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Archaeology

  • York - interpreted as leggings?
  • Birka (HAGG 1986, p.51)

Discussion
Sprang hair nets have been recovered from Danish bog finds 800-500BC. A later interpreted find from Vindonissa, Switzerland is dated to 100AD. A possible sprang loom was found in the Oseberg burial. Although this was probably a tapestry loom [INGSTAD 1992]. A few fragments of possible sprang have been found in Birka [HAGG 1986: p.51] Other sprang finds include leggings from Tegle, Norway, C6th and some fragments from York that have also been interpreted as leggings. http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprang

References

<nocite> BRANDENBURGH2009 HAGG1986 INGSTAD1992 OWEN-CROCKER2004 WINCOTT2003

</nocite> <biblio force=false>#Template:Bib</biblio>