Herjolfsnes no 37

Tunic

Herjolfsnes no.37

Pattern drawing based on Nörlund

This item was found interred with skeletal remains with a calculated height of 1.52 m (59.8″), and based on that is assumed to be those of a man. The material of the garment is a darkbrown ”four-shaft twill, well and regularly woven of firmly spun threads”. It appears to have been cut with front and rear pieces, neither having a center gore. The broad side gores are each divded by a false seam. There is no indication of what sleaves this garment might have had.

The side gores are much more narrow than in other outfits while the center pieces increase in width much faster, without the presence of a center gore. Enough of the right hand side gore exists to indicate that there was a ”pocket” slit.

Length from Shoulder to Hem: 115 cm (45.3″)
Waist Circumference: *156 cm (61.4″)
Hem Circumference: *310 cm (122″) of which the back piece is 98 cm (”38.6”)
Armhole Circumference: 66 cm (26″)
Neck Cirumference: ??
Sleeve Length: ??
Shoulder width: 48 cm (18.9″) across the back.
*Waist and hem measurements are assumptions based the front piece (now missing) accurately reflecting the size of the rear piece.


Some Sources:

  • Nörlund, Poul. ”Buried Norsemen at Herjolfsnes: an archaeological and historical study.” Meddelelser om Gronland: Udgivne af Kommissionen for ledelsen af de geologiske og geogrfiske undersogelser i Gronland. Bind LXVII. Kobenhavn: C.A. Reitzel, 1924.

Go to Tunic PageHerjolsnes Site Page


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages — Tunics — Herjolfsnes 37, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 1996 This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

Nockert Type six

Tunic

Type 6


According to the typology given in Nockert, Type 6 Tunics are typified as

”Garments consisting of two straight-cut main pieces — front and back — cut diagonally and joined together with a shoulder seam. Side gores inserted between the main pieces, combining with them to form sleeve openings. No gores actually inserted in the main pieces. Pocket slits occur.”

This is apparently an outer garment, probably sleeveless as the sleeve openings were hemmed or sewn down, such as a ”surcote ouvert” (a sleeveless surcote), or a tabard. It is not accurately datable, other than perhaps to the 14th century. There is one example of this type of tunic; Herjolfsnes no.37.


Go to Tunic Page


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages – Tunics – Type 2, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 1996, 1997. This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

St Francis of Assisi’s Cowl

Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics

Cowl of St.Francis of Assisi

francis.gif (4163 bytes)
After Flury -Lembergh

This is a Monk’s habit that once belonged to St.Francis of Assisi (d.1226).  It is housed in Asssisi, in the church of S. Francesco. It is made of an undyed fulled woollen twil, ,and is partially lined in linen. The actual garment is missing the left sleeve.   There is a linen pocket sewn into the remaining sleeve.  Several large holes in the garment have been patched, ostensibly by fabric cut from a cloak belonging to St.Clare.

  • Garment Material Length (to the shoulder):126.5 cm (”)
  • Width at the top: 97 cm (”)
  • Width at the Bottom: 167 cm (”)
Torso Material Thread Count
  • Warp is 8 Z-spun threads/cm (21.6 threads per inch)
  • Weft is 10 Z-spun theads/cm ( threads per inch)

Although this garment is identified as being a ”cowl”, it doesn’t fit the definition of a cowl according to the OED in that it has sleeves and no hood. It is closer to what was generally called a ”frock”.

This page was last modified 24 November 2002


Some Sources:

  • Flury-Lemberg, Mechthild. Textile conservation and research : a documentation of the textile department on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the Abegg Foundation. Bern : Abegg-Stiftung Bern, 1988.

Return to Contents.


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages — Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics — Cowl of St.Francis of Assisi, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 2002. This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

St Elizabeth of Thuringia’s Gown

Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics

The Gown of St. Elizabeth of Thuringia

elisabeth.gif (3682 bytes)
After Hausherr

This garment is dated to before about 1230, and is made from course wool, and lined with brown linen.  The neck hole is very small, and there may be a small opening on the left shoulder, bound with linen.

All measurements of surviving material, not of complete garment.

  • Length in front: 135 cm
  • Length in rear: 143 cm.
  • Sleeve length: 24 cm
  • Chest width: 25 cm
  • Hip width: 73 cm.
  • Hem: 203 cm.
  • Approximate loom width: 103 cm
Thread Count
  • Warp is 9 Z-spun threads/cm
  • Weft is 22 Z-spun theads/cm

This page was last modified 22 April 2003


Some Sources:

  • Hausherr, Reiner, Hg.  Dei Zeit der Staufer, Geschichte — Kunst — Kulture. (Katalog der Ausstellung, 6., verb. Aufl. 4 bande)  Stuttgart: Württembergisches Landesmuseum, 1977.
  • ”Hochmittelalterliche Schnittmuster” <http://www.tempora-nostra.de/gewandung/schnitte.shtm> 16 April 2003
  • Sturm, Andreas. email to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/75years 19 Feb 2003.

Return to Contents.


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages — Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics — The Gown of St. Elizabeth of Thuringia  by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 2003 This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

St Claire of Assisi’s Gown

Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics

The Gown of St. Clare of Assisi

clara.gif (6300 bytes)
After Hausherr

This garment is dated to before about 1253, and is of wool.

This page was last modified 22 April 2003


Some Sources:

  • Hausherr, Reiner, Hg.  Dei Zeit der Staufer, Geschichte — Kunst — Kulture. (Katalog der Ausstellung, 6., verb. Aufl. 4 bande)  Stuttgart: Württembergisches Landesmuseum, 1977.
  • ”Hochmittelalterliche Schnittmuster” <http://www.tempora-nostra.de/gewandung/schnitte.shtm> 16 April 2003
  • Sturm, Andreas. email to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/75years 19 Feb 2003.

Return to Contents.


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages — Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics — The Gown of St. Clare of Assisi<, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 2002. This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-  by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 2003 This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

St Birgittas Gown

Tunic

Birgitta’s Cloak or Dress

Image
traditional layout of the ”Mantle of St. Birgitta”. After photographs in Andersson and Franzén.

Image
Pattern drawing based on information in Andersson and Franzén.

More usually referred to as the Mantle of St. Birgitta (or, Il Mantello di Santa Brigida), studies by the late Anne Marie Franzen suggest that the garment fragments may possibly be a 14th century woman’s surcote.  The material is a fine dark-blue/mauve wool, and was likely quite expensive when it was first made.

At the time Franzen studied the garment, it was held by the the Convent of Santa Lucia a Selci in Rome.  I am told that it may be found now at Santa Brigida a Campo de’Fiori, also in Rome.

Note that this should not be confused with the ”Mantle of St. Brigit”.


Some Sources:

  • Andersson, Aron and Anne Marie Franzén. Birgittareliker inlånade till Historiska museets utställning ”Birgitta och det Heliga landet” 30 november 1973-17 februari 1974. (Antikvariskt arkiv 59) Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1975
  • Strong, Susannah. Pers Com. (19 Apr 2002) [regarding the location of the item]

Return to Contents
Some Clothing of the Middle Ages – Tunics – St. Birgitta’s Cloak or Dress, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 1998, 1999.2002 This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

Herjolfsnes no 33, 34

Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics/Gowns

Herjolfsnes nos.33, 34


Pattern drawing based on Nörlund

A man’s tunic, excavated at 1840, at the same site. It is made of a ”brown four-shaft twill (i.e. 2/2 twill), very heavy”. The determination of gender is based simply on the size of the garment.

It is cut in a front-piece, a back piece, neither with a center gore. There are two gores on each side. The two main pieces gradually increase in width from top to bottom. Both side pieces are cut with one side having a selvage edge. The back piece does not appear to have been modified to attach the sleeve, and remains essentially a straight line from shoulder to hem. The sleeve consists of two halves, with the usual gore behind the shoulder.

Length from Shoulder to Hem: 108 cm (42.5″)
Waist Circumference: 113 cm (44.5″)
Hem Circumference: 277 cm (109″) of which the side gores make up 1.7 m (66.9″)
Armhole Circumference: 55 cm (21.7″)
Neck Cirumference: 73 cm (28.7″) with the the rear piece making up 35 cm (13.8″).
Sleeve Length: 57 cm (22.4″)

No. 34 is 2.75 m (108.3″) wide, other wise was too damaged to determine much about it beyond a certain resemblance to No.33.

Maggie Forest made a separate examination of the materials of H33, H38, H39, H43, H45, H61, H65 and had the following to say:

The fabric is invariably 2/2 twill. The threads are less than a mm thick, the fabric wasn’t fulled. The result is a slightly open weave, which would have held warmth like a modern knitted sweater. The gap between each thread would be about 1/3-1/2 mm – noticeable. The warp is spun with kemp hairs included for strength, the weft is just the soft under coat, and so the fabrics have a distinctive almost tweed-like appearance. The open weave and the twill weave would have made these fabrics drape like dreams. Despite the fact that they weren’t terribly tight-fitted (although I have a thought on that too) they would have looked it, because the fabric would have clung quite closely.

The seams are just amazingly fine. They’re done from the same thread as the fabric is woven from, and stitches are frequently only about 1mm long. There are places where Nörlund states that there is no hem, only a fold-over, but in fact there is a seam there, it’s just so fine you need to look under the microscope. Leaning back, you can just see a shadow line from the seams, but the stitches are minute.

[The Greenlanders] used a stitch now known as priksom for a top stitch.  It is a running stitch, but it goes through the fabric diagonally and ends up looking totally like a modern machine seam, with each stitch butting close to the next..

The tablet woven edge that is extant in the London material also appears in the Greenland material. A couple of the hoods have a quite wide edge, about 1.5 cm wide, done in this way, which gives a really distinctive looking edge with wide stitches on the back. Very tidy.

[Forest agrees with Robin Netherton’s assertion that the Nörlund’s pattern diagrams are flawed.]  They really look nothing like it. This may be because he drew the diagrams before the first conservation, but for example, there really aren’t those curves in the 39 gown.

The false seams were not used to add additional fit – they are even all the way through the garment.

This page was last modified 11 June 2003


Some Sources:

  • Forest, Maggie. email to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Authentic_SCA 7 Feb 2003.
  • Forest, Maggie. Pers.com.
  • Nörlund, Poul. ”Buried Norsemen at Herjolfsnes: an archaeological and historical study.” Meddelelser om Gronland: Udgivne af Kommissionen for ledelsen af de geologiske og geogrfiske undersogelser i Gronland. Bind LXVII. Kobenhavn: C.A. Reitzel, 1924.

Go to Tunic PageHerjolsnes Site Page


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages — Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics/Gowns — Herjolfsnes 33, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 1996 This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

Nockert Type five

Tunic

Type 5


According to the typology given in Nockert, Type 5 Tunics are typified as

”Garments consisting of two straight-cut main pieces — front and back — joined together with a shoulder seam. Side gores inserted between the main pieces, combining with them to form sleeve openings. No gores actually inserted in the main pieces. Pocket slits occur. Long sleeve, tapering downwards, cut with an upper and lower part. Gores under the sleeves.”

This is an outer garment, but can not be identified in much more detail than that. It is datable to the first half of the 14th century. There are two examples of this type of tunic; Herjolfsnes no.34, Herjolfsnes no.34, and the ”Cloak of St. Bridget”.


Go to Tunic Page or Proceed


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages – Tunics – Type 5, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 1996, 1997. This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

Herjolfsnes no 41

Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics/Gowns

Herjolfsnes no.41


Pattern drawing based on Nörlund

A long sleeved man’s garment. It has waist-high gores in front and back, and four shaped gores on each side running from the arm holes to the hem. The side gores are only 4 cm (1.6″) at the waist and along the torso. They begin to increase abruptly in width about the hip level.

Length from Shoulder to Hem: 120 cm (47.2″)
Waist Circumference: 100 cm (39.4″)
Hem Circumference: 425 cm (167″)
Armhole Circumference: 63 cm (24.8″)
Neck Circumference: 88 cm (34.6″)
Sleeve Length: 62.5 cm (24.6″)

The sleeves are full. There are 15 closely set buttons running on each sleeve from the elbow to the wrist. These buttons are each made from a glued wad of cloth, that is then covered in cloth.  In the neck, the material is turned under and the raw edge set with an overcast stitch.

Where the seams of the gores come close together at the waist they are ornamented with a row of backstitches making them very noticeable. The long opening of the sleeve is decorated with a row of backstitching. The bottom hem is decorated with two rows of backstitching. The material is a thin ”fourshaft twill”; dark brown, although the weft is slightly more pale than the warp.

These, and many of the other Herjolfsnes garments have been re-examined by Else Ostergaard in her ”Woven into the Earth: Textile Finds in Norse Greenland” (forthcoming), and hopefully I will be able to make corrections to this material at that time.

Based on the measurements above and observations made by Robin Netherton, and work done with mock-ups, this item is clearly not a ”cote-hardi” of any kind, it is not closely fitted.  Based on the proportions of the garment, and the correlation to the skeleton it was found with, we can strongly suggest that it was a man’s garment, and specifically a small and wiry man about 5′ 5″ (165 cm or 65″) tall. suggested by the remains found with this garment.   Netherton also stipulates that Norlund’s drawings are not consistent with his written measurements and are most likely inaccurate, and so should be used cautiously. She adds that later authors’ re-interpretations of those drawings appear to be increasingly removed in accuracy from the original. (That observation, I should note, also applies to the drawing above.)

This page was last modified 10 June 2003


Some Sources:

  • Netherton, Robin. ”The Greenland Gored Gown: A Comparison with Clothing Construction on the Continent,” May 6, 2001, 36th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Michigan.
  • Netherton, Robin. . email to Rec.Org.SCA 12 Sep 2002.
  • Netherton, Robin. Pers.com.
  • Nörlund, Poul. ”Buried Norsemen at Herjolfsnes: an archaeological and historical study.” Meddelelser om Gronland: Udgivne af Kommissionen for ledelsen af de geologiske og geogrfiske undersogelser i Gronland. Bind LXVII. Kobenhavn: C.A. Reitzel, 1924.

Go to Tunic PageHerjolsnes Site Page


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages — Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics/Gowns — Herjolfsnes 41, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 1996, 2003 This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

Herjolfsnes no 39

Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics/Gowns

Herjolfsnes no.39


Pattern drawing based on Nörlund

A short sleeved woman’s dress made from a front and back piece with center gores, and two gores on the right side, and a single, wide gore on the left side with a false seam running down the center.

The sleeves are 30 cm (7.9″) long, and the bottom is 360 cm (141.7″) in circumference. The armhole is 58 cm (22.8″) around, while the neck is 70.5 cm around. The waist measurement is 98.5 cm (38.8″). There is a 4.5 cm (1.77″) slit in the front, with two pairs of edged eyelet holes. Both the neck and the bottom edge are turned back and sewn with a row of backstitches. The raw edge is overcast. The sleeve ends are simple turned over.

The material is full and heavy and well made. The weaving is ”four-shaft” (i.e. 2/2) , with the weft so firmly worked that the warp is no longer visible.

Maggie Forest made a separate examination of the materials of H33, H38, H39, H43, H45, H61, H65 and had the following to say:

The fabric is invariably 2/2 twill. The threads are less than a mm thick, the fabric wasn’t fulled. The result is a slightly open weave, which would have held warmth like a modern knitted sweater. The gap between each thread would be about 1/3-1/2 mm – noticeable. The warp is spun with kemp hairs included for strength, the weft is just the soft under coat, and so the fabrics have a distinctive almost tweed-like appearance. The open weave and the twill weave would have made these fabrics drape like dreams. Despite the fact that they weren’t terribly tight-fitted (although I have a thought on that too) they would have looked it, because the fabric would have clung quite closely.

The seams are just amazingly fine. They’re done from the same thread as the fabric is woven from, and stitches are frequently only about 1mm long. There are places where Nörlund states that there is no hem, only a fold-over, but in fact there is a seam there, it’s just so fine you need to look under the microscope. Leaning back, you can just see a shadow line from the seams, but the stitches are minute.

[The Greenlanders] used a stitch now known as priksom for a top stitch.  It is a running stitch, but it goes through the fabric diagonally and ends up looking totally like a modern machine seam, with each stitch butting close to the next..

The tablet woven edge that is extant in the London material also appears in the Greenland material. A couple of the hoods have a quite wide edge, about 1.5 cm wide, done in this way, which gives a really distinctive looking edge with wide stitches on the back. Very tidy.

[Forest agrees with Robin Netherton’s assertion that the Nörlund’s pattern diagrams are flawed.]  They really look nothing like it. This may be because he drew the diagrams before the first conservation, but for example, there really aren’t those curves in the 39 gown.

The false seams were not used to add additional fit – they are even all the way through the garment.

Although I have not been been able to verify this, I have been told that the new examination of these garments Som syel til jorden says that this garment has been carbon dated to 480+/-60 BP, or 1420-1530

This page was last modified 24 April 2004


Some Sources:

  • Forest, Maggie. email to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Authentic_SCA 7 Feb 2003.
  • Forest, Maggie. Pers.com.
  • Nörlund, Poul. ”Buried Norsemen at Herjolfsnes: an archaeological and historical study.” Meddelelser om Gronland: Udgivne af Kommissionen for ledelsen af de geologiske og geogrfiske undersogelser i Gronland. Bind LXVII. Kobenhavn: C.A. Reitzel, 1924.

Go to Tunic PageHerjolsnes Site Page


Some Clothing of the Middle Ages — Kyrtles/Cotes/Tunics/Gowns — Herjolfsnes 39, by I. Marc Carlson, Copyright 1997, 2003 This code is given for the free exchange of information, provided the Author’s Name is included in all future revisions, and no money change hands-

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