<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></SPAN></span></h2>
<h3><SPAN name="I_PREHISTORIC_FEMALE" id="I_PREHISTORIC_FEMALE"></SPAN>PREHISTORIC DRESS. FEMALE.</h3>
<p>The woman's attire would have been chiefly a shortish skirt or wrap of
coarse linen, wool, or leather, gathered in front or folded at one hip;
grass cloth may also have been in use in most primitive tribes. Probably
the upper part of the body was kept bare, except for many ornaments and
necklaces, but a bodice or jacket cut in the same simple form as the
male shirt, with a heavy belt or girdle, would have been used, and
certainly a large shawl, which could be wrapped over the head and round
the figure during inclement hours. Dyed or painted patterns on the
cloths might well have been also in use, their chief designs being
stripes, circles or dots, zigzag lines, diamonds and plaid squares, rope
patterns and plaited patterns. The hair would have been loose, plaited,
or coiled<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></SPAN></span> on top, held by bone pins or circlets of bronze.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="I_PREHISTORIC_MALE" id="I_PREHISTORIC_MALE"></SPAN>PREHISTORIC DRESS. MALE.</h3>
<p>We have little description or illustration to certify the actual dress
of the early inhabitants of Britain, but we can draw conclusions with
pretty certain assurance, from the knowledge of their mode of living.
From their attainments in artistic design and handiwork, it is clear
they had arrived at a very high state of savage culture before the Roman
invasion; and we have only to study the better types of savage life
still in progress, to picture how our own primitive race would be likely
to dress under the conditions of climate. The thousands of "finds,"
which accumulate evidence every year, give us a closer acquaintance with
their customs and work. The rest we must imagine from our general
knowledge of what they had to contend with in climate, forest, cave, and
floods.</p>
<p>These early people, it is presumed from certain discoveries, had long
known the art of coarsely weaving flax and wool, which must soon have
been in general use,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></SPAN></span> from its being healthier and cleaner than the
garments of skin. And very probably a coarse linen, with simple dyes of
red, blue, yellow, and brown, was in use here when the Romans came.</p>
<p>The head-dress consisted of a cap of fur or wool, probably decorated
with a feather, over loose and most likely very unkempt hair falling to
the shoulders. The Gauls cut their locks from the back of the head,
often tying up the remainder in a tuft on the top; no doubt the hair was
sometimes plaited or pinned up with wood, bone, or bronze ornaments.
Bone pins, teeth, and boar tusks were carried in the ears, as well as
studs of bone or stone in the underlip, and even the cheek may have been
so decorated, as it was amongst the Esquimaux. The face and body were
painted with red and white ochre and a blue stain. The neck was adorned
with strings of teeth, stones, amber, jet, bronze, and probably beads of
glass or baked clay coloured. Amulets and tokens, armlets and bracelets
were all in use. Also the torque, a twisted rod of gold flattened or
curled together at the ends, was a mark of dignity. A wristlet of wood,
bone, or leather was worn when the bow and arrows were used.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></SPAN></span> The arms
were a spear of flint or bronze and a dagger of the same, a hatchet or
heavy club, a mace studded with flint or bronze spikes, and the sling,
which would have necessitated a leather wallet to carry the stones; fish
spears and snags. Also the bolas for felling cattle seems to have been
known; in fact nearly all the usual implements appertaining to savage
life were in use.</p>
<p><SPAN id="plate02" name="plate02"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/plate02thumb.jpg" width-obs="235" height-obs="391" alt="See caption" title="See caption" /> <p class="linktext"><SPAN href="images/plate02full.jpg">larger image</SPAN></p> <p class="caption">Plate II.</p>
<ul class="left">
<li>(<i>a</i>) Elizabethan Robe in Plush. 1585-1605.</li>
<li>(<i>b</i>) Elizabethan Robe in Silk Brocade. 1565-85.</li>
<li>(<i>c</i>) Elizabethan Male Robe in Velvet Brocade. 1580-1615.</li>
<li>(<i>d</i>) Back-piece of Elizabethan Doublet in Embroidered Linen. 1580-1605.</li>
</ul>
<ul class="i none left">
<li>Measures, see p. <SPAN href="#Page_281">281</SPAN>.</li>
<li>Sleeve pattern of C, see p. <SPAN href="#Page_300">300</SPAN>.</li>
</ul></div>
<p>The first item of male attire was of two skins fastened at the
shoulders, and from this we get the early chasuble form (which may be so
beautifully treated, even to the present time), girt with a leather
thong or strap at the waist. One skin lapped the other, and hardly
needed sewing together at the sides, while thus it was easier to throw
off; it may also have been tied up between the legs. The fur was worn
both inside and out, according to the weather; this large skin wrap
would also be worn cross-ways with the right shoulder free, and the
simple cloak of various lengths with a hole for the head to pass through
was no doubt one of the first discoveries in costume.</p>
<p>A loin cloth or skin may have been worn alone, caught up through the
legs and fastened at the back of the waist with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></SPAN></span> a heavy belt and set
well down the hips. This would hold a number of personal necessities, in
the shape of a wallet and dagger. The legs would be wrapped with skins,
tied up or crossed by leather or sinew thongs, or with hemp or grass
rope. Skins were probably also used on the feet, gathered and tied above
the instep and round the ankle.</p>
<p>The enumeration of these items will give a pretty definite idea of how
the early race would appear in their more or less attired form. In
fighting, they cleared for action (as it were) and discarded all
clothing, their only protection being a shield of wicker or wood covered
with leather; it may have been studded with bronze plates or painted
with grotesque characters, as were their own bodies, in true savage
style, to strike fear into their enemies; it is even possible feather
decorations formed part of their "get up."</p>
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