Posts in Category: Bibliography

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The Arnegunde Project:

Conjectural Merovingian clothing construction of the mid 6th century

In 1959, archaeologists excavating under the Cathedral of Saint Denis in Paris, resting place of the Kings and Queens of France, found a sarcophagus containing the body of a woman. The woman bore a ring inscribed with the name “Arnegundis.” She is thought to be Arnegunde, wife to Clotaire I (511–561) and mother of King Chilperic († 584) (Perin et al. 2007, 182).

This project brings together current research to gain a better understanding of the context of her burial and the textiles that comprised her burial garments. The author does not contend that the garments are exact replicas of the garments in which Arnegunde was buried, but every attempt was made to make sure that they would be familiar to Arnegunde and acceptable to one of her station.

Background of Merovingian Period

The period from the late 5th century to the late 8th century northern Gaul is known as the Merovingian, after the semi-mythical ruler, Merovech.  We know very little about their daily lives, having to rely on the few written texts that survive and emerging archaeological evidence.  The three texts are narrative histories, Gregory of Tours’ History of the Franks, Fredegar’s Chronicle, and the anonymous Liber Historiae Francorum (Bachrach, 1973).  The Franks were a group of Germanic tribes — the Chatti, the Ripuarians, and the Salians — who shared similar laws and customs. In the 4th and 5th centuries AD, they began settling in the Roman region of Gaul (which included what is now Belgium, France, Luxembourg, and some of Germany and Italy). At first they lived in Belgium; eventually most of Gaul would belong to the Frankish empire.

Very little is known about the early rulers of the Franks. A Salian king named Merovech (or Merovee) founded the royal Merovingian dynasty, whose kings were notable for their long hair. At that time the Franks were allies of Rome, and Merovech is said to have fought with the Romans against Attila the Hun.

The time period of this study was the mid-to-late sixth century and is based on a set of grave goods associated with Arnegunde, queen and wife to Clothar. The Merovingian period was one of warfare, on the field and in the palace. Clothar came to power through violence and married the royal widow, Guntheuca, taking the widow as he took the kingdom. At this time, women were a temporary accessory in the king’s bed, and only through the bearing of an heir found any hold on position and power. As Stafford (1983) says, “his wives were taken up and put aside as political shifts demanded rather than passions prevailed.” (p. 51-2)

Between the 530s and the 550s, Clothar had a succession of wives and concubines: Radegund, daughter of King Bertacharius; Ingunde was in favor in the 520s, and again mid-530s; by 537 she was replaced by her own sister Arnegunde; before 540 he had another mistress, Chunsina. Very little is known about the origins of the sisters Ingunde and Arnegunde, and the concubine Chunsina. (Stafford, 1983)

Arnegunde, as the mother of the future king, Chilperic, was afforded a burial place in the Basilica of Saint Denis, to the north of Paris.

Archeological Evidence

The Basilica of Saint-Denis was the burial location of many of the Merovingian dynasty starting in the east end of the Basilica, near the grave of Saint-Denis, around 475. (Fleury & France-Lanord, 1998) The Merovingian graves were excavated over a period of about 30 years, starting in the 1950s by Eduard Salin and Michel Fleury. The archeological finds were published in French and German publications over the years and only recently have articles been published in English.  (Rast-Eicher, 2010)

At Saint-Denis, a principal burial place for Frankish kings, a large stone sarcophagus was found under the choir.  The contents of this tomb consisted in great part of a mass of precious textiles, silks, and other organic materials.  The large limestone coffin was found to contain the remains of a woman’s body which had been embalmed before burial, so part of the lungs survived.  She was about five feet tall, of slight build, and blonde hair. (France-Lanord, 1979; Fleury & France-Lanord, 1998; Perin, 2007) A monogrammed gold finger-ring, ARNEGUNDIS REGINE, identified the female buried inside as Queen Arnegunde. (Rast-Eicher, 2010) She is believed to have died around 580. (Périn & Calligaro, 2005)  New studies have been completed both on the skeletal remains and the conserved textiles. Rast-Eicher (2010) explains that Arnegunde was older at the time of her death than originally thought and probably died from a dysentery outbreak. She had childhood poliomyelitis leaving her with a damaged right leg.

Burial customs of the middle to late sixth century provide a wealth of metal artifacts, but textiles are far more rare. For this reason, the extraordinary preservation of the Arnegunde artifacts provides a rare glimpse into the textiles, and provides clues to a conjectural clothing construction. By the seventh centuries, burial custom were changing and grave goods become much more rare. (Owen – Crocker, 1986; Effros, 2002) The stone sarcophagus provided a protected environment, which allowed the preservation of some of the textiles, both as fragments and as pseudomorphs on the metallic objects. (Marzinzik, 2008)

The following sections will discuss selected garment fragments found in Arnegunde’s tomb. Additional textiles, possibly shrouds, were also found but will not be discussed in this article. Please see Rast-Eicher (2010) for a longer description of the most recent investigations into the textiles.

Arnegunde’s Burial Clothing

Kaftan

Working from the outermost garment, the kaftan, we will talk about some of the most recent theories of fiber, textile and construction. Sadly, the garment is incomplete so there is much left to conjecture. (Perin & Calligro; Rast-Eicher, 2010) The garment was a front closing kaftan or robe, probably floor length. Rast-Eicher (2010) calls this garment a “mantle”.  For the purposes of this research project we will use “kaftan.” The front opening was edged with tablet woven bands and the sleeves had a gold embroidered band. The hose and garters found with Arnegunde have led to a great deal of specualation about the length of the outer layers of clothing. Owens-Crocker (1986) comments that the decorative nature of the garter and shoe beuckles indicate the clothing would have had a lower length of just below the knee. We know know that the outer layers were nearly floor length. (Rast-Eicher, 2010)

The textile of this garment is described by Rast-Eicher as “the so-called ‘violet’ piece, a textile with one system made of animal fiber, the other system is of plant fiber, but mostly not preserved.” (2010, p. 209) She does not define the textile structure or colors of the fibers. However, past publications have described this garment as reddish or purple. (France-Lanord, 1979; Marzinzik, 2008)

The lower portion of the sleeve was different fabric than the body. Rast-Eicher describes it as “ samite 2/1 Z  … with a warp proportion of 2:1.” (2010, p. 210)  she goes on to further describe the embroidered gold band as being 7 cm. below the cuff seam. The textile underlying the gold embroidery has not survived, although a few red threads are visible.

Although Rast-Eicher (2010) describes the fiber content of the textiles as animal or plant, other researchers have described the fiber content as silk, linen or wool. (France-Lanord, 1979; Marzinzik, 2008) Just how these various layers of textiles actually were worn is still highly conjectural.

When it comes to colors used in the textiles, again much is not known. France-Lanord calls this textile “violet”. (1979) An under layer has been called “reddish”. (France-Lanord, 1979; Marzinzik, 2008) Both the silk textile and the purple to red dyes were imports to the Merovingian territories. These would have been imported along the Rhone or Rhine trade routes from the Byzantine empire. The presence of these luxury items as grave goods marks the high status of the individual buried in sarcophagus 49.

The front edge of the kaftan was decorated with a brocaded tablet woven band made of at least 100 tablets and is approximately 6.5 cm wide. Rast-Eicher describes the band as “ brocaded with a triple silk thread (z-spun) and displays a pattern of diagonals and lozenges (Fig. 33.3).” (2010, p. 210) A second band in a simple tabby/repp, 16 warp threads wide is sewn to the “violet” textile. The weft has not survived, except for one brocading weft stitch. The wider band was key in identifying the layers as it lay under the belt and was found along the skeletal remains down to the lower leg. (Rast-Eicher, 2010)

Walton Rogers (2007) suggests similarities between the Arnegunde kaftan and the Woman’s garment found at Sutton Hoo. Both had ornamented cuffs, although in Sutton Hoo the ornamentation was tablet woven bands. The style of a front opening kaftan had correlations in other garments of the period from cultures to the east and in artworks from the period.

Two round brooches were found on the body in a position suggesting their use as a closure along the center axis above the waist. The period of the later sixth century is one of fashion change for Merovingian women. The earlier Continental tradition of four brooches was giving way to the Byzantine-influenced style of a single brooch at the neckline holding a mantle over a brooch-less tunic. (Rogers, 2007; Perin, 2000)

Kaftan Reconstructed

The Arnegunde costume...

The Arnegunde costume…

The kaftan is the outermost layer of the ensemble I created for this project. It also took the most time because of the various time-consuming pieces such as the gold embroidery and embroidery edging the front opening. It actually assembled pretty quickly once the components had been finished. It was mostly machine sewn where the seam would be hidden, with a lot of hand finishing on visible portions of the garment.

The fashion textile is a tabby with a dark red linen warp and a black silk weft. The lining is silk twill with a gold warp and a purple weft. The garment is bag lined, with a couple areas that were pieced together because I didn’t have quite enough fabric. The sleeves are lined in the turquoise taffeta that is also on the lower cuff of the sleeves.

The pattern was drafted using the rectangular construction method. I made a compromise on design between a flattering fit and a more period style represented by the Grande Robe of Bathilde. This front-closing garment the most similar extant garment available.

 

 

 

 

Robe_TresorsDeChelles

Cutting and assembly diagram for the Grande Robe. (Source: LaPorte & Boyer, 1991)

There is some question about whether this garment could be attributed to Bathilde, due to its size being much larger than would fit Bathilde (personal communication, Wamers, 2013). And there is some discussion on whether it is actually from a couple centuries later, but until new information is published, we are using the current designation at Bathilde’s Grande Robe. If the academic community makes a definitive decision otherwise, I will be happy to make the change to this publication.

The project kaftan has one gore on each side starting at the sleeve and ending at the hem. Bathilde’s Robe has side gores that start at or below the waist, so there is some difference between the two garments in silhouette.

Embroidery on sleeve

The gold embroidery on the cuffs was made of a fine spiral wrapped thread. The gold foil was wrapped around a core of silk, .25 mm thick and .8 mm wide.  There were about 13 to 14 turns to an inch. The diameter of the threads of gold reached about 0.45 mm with a length of up to 150 mm. The gold was couched down using a very thin silk thread in very small stitches that were more or less close to one another, depending on the type of pattern. (France-Lanord, 1962)

arnegunde_embroidery

During the original excavation on conservation, the gold embroidery was put onto a waxed strip. The underlying fabric is gone, but a few red threads remain. (source: France-Lanord, 1998)

The decoration is composed of a series of rosettes, which are inscribed in a rectangular box and are accompanied by spherical triangles. On a single page or a frieze runs with triangles that are offset from each other like roof tiles and inlaid with a spiral, which follows the contour of the triangle. The rosettes show three variants:

      • Heart flower with round petals and eight trapezoidal-shapes;
      • Heart flower with round and six pointed oval leaves, which are separated by spherical triangles inscribed spiral from one another;
      • Circle whose inner edge is decorated with small triangles, which are designed with a spiral; inside the circle are (from left to right): a small, vertical almond, a large, well vertical half almond (with the straight side left) and three small seeds that are spread like a fan in the right half of the circle. (France-Lanord, 1962)

Only 17 of the rosettes survived, although there were originally 18 or 19 in total. Parallel gold threads run along the edge of the band. The band was 30 mm wide and about 37-38 cm long.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The graphic below shows the draft for the embroidery.

arnegunde cuff

 

 

Here is the embroidery before putting it on the sleeve.

IMG_0050

The reconstruction was done using synthetic gold, couched down with fine silk thread. The underlying fabric was also used in an undertunic and is a tabby with a linen warp and a silk weft.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More detailed posts will follow when I get them completed…

Bibliography

Audollent, A. (1921) Les Tombes des Martres-de-Veyre. Man, 21. 161-164.

Bachrach, B.S. (1973) Liber Historiae Francorum. Coronado Press: Lawrence, Kansas.

Effros, B. (2002). Caring for body and soul. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State  University Press

Fleury M., and France-Lanord A. (1998) Les trésors mérovingiens de la basilique de Saint-Denis, Woippy, Klopp.

France-Lanord, A. (1979) La fouille en laboratoire. Dossiers de l’Archéologie 32, 67–91.

Marzinzik, Sonja, (2008). “Expressions of Power – Luxury textiles from early medieval northern Europe” Textile Society of America Symposium Proceedings. Paper 113.

Owen-Crocker, G.R. (2004). Dress in Anglo Saxon England. Boydell Press.

Perin, P. (2000). Aspects of Late Merovingian Costume in the Morgan Collection. In From Attila to Charlemagne: arts of the early medieval period in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 242-267.

Périn P., et al. (2007) La tombe d’Arégonde, Nouvelles analyses en laboratoire du mobilier métallique et des restes organiques de la défunte du sarcophage 49 de la basilique de St. Denis. Antiquités nationales 36/2005, 181–206.

Périn P. and Calligaro T., (2005) “La tombe d’Arégonde: Nouvelles analyses en laboratoire du mobilier métallique et des restes organiques de la défunte du sarcophage 49 de la basilique  de Saint-Denis”, Antiquités nationales 37, 181-206.

Rast-Eicher, A. (2008) Textiles et costume du Haut Moyen Âge. Histoires et Images Médiévales 20, 50–56.

Rogers, P.W. (2007). Cloth and clothing in early Anglo-Saxon England: AD 450-700. (No. 145). Council for British Archeaology.

Stafford, Pauline, (1983). Queens, Concubines, and Dowagers: The King’s Wife in the Early Middle ages. Athens, GA: The University of Georgia Press.

 

The beginnings of a Merovingian Material Culture Bibliography

This is by no means an exhaustive listing. But it should give you some starting places to begin your research, or to add to your current research. Eventually, I will have this annotated as I get things translated and assimilated.

If you know of any resources that not listed here, please put them in comments. Thanks!

 

  • Aberg, N., (1922). Die Franken und Westgoten in der Volkenwanderungzeit. Uppsala.
  • Aberg, N., (1923). Die Goten und Langobarden in Italien. Uppsala.
  • Aberg, N., (1945). The Occident and the Orient in the Art of the Seventh Century. Vol. 3, the Merovingian Empire. Stockholm.
  • Alduc-Le Bagousse, Armelle (ed.). Inhumations de prestige ou prestige de linhumation? Expression du pouvoir dans l’au-delà (IVe-XVe siècle). Table ronde du CRAHM 4. Caen : CRAHM, Université de Caen Basse-Normandie, 2009. Pp. 464.
  • Böhme, H. W. (1974). Germanische Grabfunde des 4. bis 5. Jahrhunderts zwischen unterer Elbe und Loire: Studien zur Chronologie und Bevölkerungsgeschichte. Munich.
  • Böhme, H. W. (1986). Das Ende der Römerherrschaft in Britannien und die angelsächsische Besiedlung Englands im 5. Jahrhundert. Jahrbuch des Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum Mainz 33: 469-574.
  • Böhner, K. 1958. Die fränkischen Alterthümer des Trierer Landes. Berlin: Verlag. Gebr. Mann.
  • Brugmann, B. 1999. The role of continental artefact-types in sixth-century Kentish chronology. In The Pace of Change: studies in medieval chronology, eds. Hines, J. Høilund Nielsen, K. and Siegmund, F.. Oxford: Oxbow: 37-64.
  • Brulet, R. 1990. Les fouilles du quartier Saint-Brice à Tournai: l’environnement funéraire de la sépulture de Childéric. Louvain-la-Neuve.
  • Carver, M. O. H. (ed). The Age of Sutton Hoo: the seventh century in north-western Europe. Woodbridge: Boydell Press: **
  • Crowfoot, E. and Hawkes, S.C. 1967. Early Anglo-Saxon gold braids, Medieval Archaeology 11, 42-86.
  • Cutler, Anthony. (Oct., 1997). The right hand’s cunning: Craftsmanship and the demand for art in late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Speculum, 72(4). 971-994.
  • Evison, V. I. 1965. Fifth-century invasions south of the Thames. London: University of London, The Athlone Press.
  • Farrell, R. and Neumann de Vegvar, C., (eds.) Sutton Hoo: fifty years after. American Early Medieval Studies. Oxford, Ohio: 75-81.
  • Ferdiere, Alain. (1984). Le travail du textile en Region Centre de l’Age du fer au haut Moyen-Age. Revue archeologique du Centre de la France. 23(2). 209-275.
  • Fleury, M. (1963). L’anneau sigillaire de la reine Arnegonde, femme de Clotaire I. Annexe aux Proces-verbaux de la Commission municipale du Vieux Paris (séance du 11 fevrier 1963), p. 5-14.
  • Fleury, M. (1963). L’anneau sigillaire de la reine Arnegonde, femme de Clotaire Ier, decouvert a Saint-Denis, Bulletin de la Societe nationale des Antiquaries de France (séance du 20 favrier 1963), p. 34-42.
  • Fleury, M. and France-Lanord, A. (1961). Les bijoux merovingien d’Arnegonde, Art of France, 1, p. 7-18.
  • Fleury, M. and France-Lanord, A. (1979). Bijoux et parures merovingiens de la reine Aregonde, belle-fille de Clovis, decouverts a Saint-Denis, Dossiers de l’Archeologies, n° 32, janvier-fevrier.
  • Fleury, M. and France-Lanord, A. (1998). Les tresors merovingiens de la basilique de Saint-Denis, G. Klopp, Woippy.
  • France-Lanord, A. (1979). La fouille en labratoire: methode de travail. Les Dossiers de l’Archaeologie. 32. 69-91.
  • France-Lanord, A. and Fleury, M., (1962). Das Grab der Arnegundis in Saint-Denis, Germania, 40, 2, p. 341-359.
  • Gaillard de Semainville, Henri (2003). Nouvelle examen de la plaque-boucle merovingienne de Landelelinus decouverte a Ladoix-Serrigny (Cote d’Or). Revue Archeologique de l’Est. 52. 297-327. (French).
  • Hawkes, S.C. and Dunning, G. 1961. A catalogue of animal-ornamented buckles and related belt fittings. Medieval Archaeology, 5: 1-70.
  • Hodges, R. and Whitehouse, D. 1983. Mohammed, Charlemagne and the origins of Europe. London: Duckworth.
  • Hübener, W. 1981. Eine Studie zu den Beilwaffen der Merowingerzeit. Zeitschrift für Archäologie des Mittelalters 8: 65-127.
  • LaPorte, Jean-Pierre. (1985). Tissus medievaux de Chelles et de Faremoutiers. . Tissu & vetement: 5000 ans de savoir-faire. Musee Archeologique Departmental du Val-d’Oise.
  • Leeds, E.T. 1936. Early Anglo-Saxon art and archaeology. Oxford: The Clarendon Press.
  • Legoux, R., Perin, P, and Vallet, F. (2006). Chronologie normalise du mobilier funeraire merovingingien entre Mance et Lorraine, (n° hors serie du Bulletin de liaison de l’Association francaise d’Archeologie merovingienne), AFAM, Saint-German-en-Laye.
  • Legoux, R., Périn, P. and Vallet, F. 2004. Chronologie normalisée du mobilier funéraire mérovingien entre Manche et Lorraine. Paris: Association francaise d’Archeologie merovingienne .
  • Martin, M. (1991). Zur frümittelalterlichen Gürteltracht de Frau in der Burgundia, Francia, und Aquitania, dans DONNAY, G. (ed), L’Art des invasions en Hongrie et en Wallonie, Actes du colloque de 1979, Musee royal de Mariemont, Bruxelles, p. 31-84.
  • Martin, Max.(2001). Early Merovingian Women’s Brooches. In From Attila to Charlemagne. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. 226-241.
  • Marzinzik, S., 2003. Early Anglo-Saxon belt buckles (late 5th to early 8th centuries A.D.) : their classification and context. Oxford: BAR British series 357.
  • Motteau, James. (1985). L’habillement de la sepulture merovingienne de Perrusson (Indre-et-Loire). Revue archeologique du Centre de la France. 24(2). 256-257.
  • Noble, Thomas F. X. Julia M. H. Smith. (1997). The Carolingians: An English Language Bibliography
  • Perin, P., (1991). Pour une revision de la datation de la tombe d’Arego nde, espouse de Clotaire Ier, decouverte en 1959 dans la basilique de Saint-Denis, Archeologie medievale, XXI, p. 21-50.
  • Perin, P., (1991). Quelques considerations sur la basilique de Saint-Denis et sa necropole a l’epoque merovingienne, dans DUVOSQUEL J.-M. And DIERKENS A. (eds), Villes et campagnes au Moyen Age. Melanges Georges Despy, Editions du Perron, Liege, p. 599-624.
  • Perin, P., Calligro, T., avec la coll. De Buchet, L., Cassiman, J.-J., Darton, Y., Gallien, V., Poirot, J.-P., Rast, A., Rucker, C., and Vallet, F. (2007). La tombe d’Aregonde. Ouvelles analyses en labratoire du mobilier metallique et des restes organiques de la defunte du sarcophage 49 de la basilique de Saint-Denis, Antiquites nationales, 37, (2005), p. 181-206.
  • Perin, Patrick (2000). Aspects of late Merovingian costume in the Morgan Collection. In From Attila to Charlemagne: arts of the early Medieval period in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art . 242-267.
  • Procopius. History of the Gothic Wars.
  • Rast-Eicher, Antoinette. (2010). Garment for a queen. North European Symposium for Archaeological Textiles X. 208-210.
  • Riché, Pierre, (1996). Dictionnaire des Francs: les temps mérovingiens (Etrépilly). 944.01303 R397D STX.
  • Rogers, P. W. 2007. Cloth and clothing in early Anglo-Saxon England, AD 450-700. York: CBA Research Report 145.
  • Roth, H. (1986) Zweifel an Aregunde, Marburger Studien zur Vor- und Fruhgesichichte, 7, p. 267-276.
  • Schulze, M. (1976). Einflusse byzantinischer Prunkgewander auf die frankische Frauentracht, Archeologhische Korrespondanzblatt, 6,2, p. 149-161.
  • Sørensen, P. 1997. Jutes in Kent? Consideration of the problem of ethnicity in southern Scandinavia and Kent in the Migration Period, in Method and Theory in Historical Archaeology (Papers of the ‘Medieval Europe Brugge 1997’ Conference), eds. De Boe, G. and Verhaege, F. Zellik: 165-73.
  • Soulat, J. 2009. Le matériel archéologique de type Saxon et Anglo-Saxon en Gaule Mérovingienne. Paris: Tome XX des Mémoires publiés par l’Association française d’Archéologie mérovingienne.
  • Thillaud, P., (1993). L’Age au deces de la reine Aregonde, espouse de Clotiaire Ier, d’apres, une nouvelle expertise osteoarcheologiques, Cahiers de la Rotunde, 14, p. 169-172.
  • Vielitz, K. (2003). Die Grantscheifibeln der Merowingerzeit, (Europe medievale, 3), Editions Monique Mergoil, Montagnac.
  • Von Armin Volkmann and Theune, claudia. (2001). Millefiori beads from the Merovingian period of middle Europe. Ethnographisch-Archaologische Zeitschrift. 42(4). 521-553. (German).
  • Welch, M. 1991. Contacts across the Channel between the Fifth and Seventh Centuries : a review of the archaeological evidence. Studien zur Sachsenforschung 7: 261-269.
  • Wood, I. 1992. Frankish hegemony in England. In Carver, M. O. H. (ed). The Age of Sutton Hoo: the seventh century in north-western Europe. Woodbridge: Boydell Press: 235-241.

And here’s a gratuitous picture because it’s purty.

Disc brooch from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.