Fabric prices in the 15th century

An area for discussing methods for achieving or approximating a more authentic re-creation, for armour, soft kit, equipment, ...

Moderator: Glen K

Post Reply
User avatar
James B.
Archive Member
Posts: 31596
Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2002 2:01 am
Location: Ashburn VA
Contact:

Fabric prices in the 15th century

Post by James B. »

I am looking for some resources on fabric prices in the 15th century; I want to do a comparison of the cost of wool to silk or silk damask.

Thanks
James B.
In the SCA: Master James de Biblesworth
Archer in La Belle Compagnie
Historic Life
User avatar
Alcyoneus
Archive Member
Posts: 27097
Joined: Thu Aug 17, 2000 1:01 am
Location: Wichita, KS USA

Post by Alcyoneus »

Have you looked in The Tudor Tailor? It is 16thC, but I think it covers relative prices for early in the century.
My 10yo daughter says I'm pretty!

Squire to Jarl Asgeirr Gunnarson, Barony of Vatavia, Calontir
User avatar
Karen Larsdatter
Archive Member
Posts: 3104
Joined: Mon Dec 29, 2003 2:01 am
Location: Ashburn, VA
Contact:

Re: Fabric prices in the 15th century

Post by Karen Larsdatter »

"Mediaeval Cloth: Cloth types in the late 15th century" (pp. 3-9) and "Ells, Aunes, & Braccia: Notes on medieval cloth measures (p. 10) of Dragon #10

A whole lot of references to wool, silk, and damask in the Paston letters (you could start with Garments in the Paston Letters to figure out which documents will be especially useful, but I don't think the links from there work any more)

The Wool Trade In English Medieval History

Medieval wool and cloth exports and The English medieval wool and cloth trade: new approaches for the local historian

John Munro has several articles on this sort of thing -- primarily relating to the wool industry in England and the Low Countries. Some of the ones most relevant to what you're interested in are Flemish Woollens and German Commerce during the Later Middle Ages: Changing Trends in Cloth Prices and Markets, 1290-1550; The West European Woollen Industries and their Struggles for International Markets, c.1000-1500; Wool and Wool-Based Textiles in the West European Economy, c.800 - 1500: Innovations and Traditions in Textile Products, Technology, and Industrial Organisation; Industrial Change in the Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century Low Countries: the Arrival of Spanish Merino Wools and the Expansion of the 'Nouvelles Draperies'; The Symbiosis of Towns and Textiles: Urban Institutions and the Changing Fortunes of Cloth Manufacturing in the Low Countries and England, 1280-1570; Textiles as Articles of Consumption in Flemish Towns, 1330-1575; and The Low Countries' Export Trade in Textiles with the Mediterranean Basin, 1200-1600: A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Comparative Advantages in Overland and Maritime Trade Routes.
Unavailable online, but potentially useful: "Wool-Price Schedules and the Qualities of English Wools in the Later Middle Ages, ca. 1270-1499," Textile History 9 (1978); reprinted in Textiles, Towns, and Trade: Essays in the Economic History of Late-Medieval England and the Low Countries.




How much research are you looking to do for this, btw? Here's some additional resources, but most of 'em you'll have to get either through interlibrary loan or some other method.
Rembrandt Duits, "Figured Riches: The Value of Gold Brocades in Fifteenth-Century Florentine Painting," Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 62 (1999)
Carole Collier Frick, Dressing Renaissance Florence: Families, Fortunes, and Fine Clothing
Alison Hanham, "Foreign Exchange and the English Wool Merchant in the Late 15th Century," Bulletin of the Institute for Historical Research 44 (1973)
Alison Hanham, The Celys and Their World: An English Merchant Family of the Fifteenth Century
Jennifer I. Kermode, "Money and Credit in the Fifteenth Century: Some Lessons from Yorkshire," Business History Review vol. 65, no. 3 (1991)
"The price of coloured damask in the Trattato, 1350-1550," Apollo CXXV (1987)
Larsdatter.com: read the linkspages, and follow me on Facebook & Tumblr.
User avatar
James B.
Archive Member
Posts: 31596
Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2002 2:01 am
Location: Ashburn VA
Contact:

Post by James B. »

Alcyoneus thanks for the heads up, Kim has a copy of the book I will have to read that.


Karen all I can say is HOLY CRAP! Just a quick scan of what you posted already answers so many questions for me. I may go much further with my project than I had planned now!
James B.
In the SCA: Master James de Biblesworth
Archer in La Belle Compagnie
Historic Life
User avatar
Karen Larsdatter
Archive Member
Posts: 3104
Joined: Mon Dec 29, 2003 2:01 am
Location: Ashburn, VA
Contact:

Re: Fabric prices in the 15th century

Post by Karen Larsdatter »

James B. wrote:Karen all I can say is HOLY CRAP! Just a quick scan of what you posted already answers so many questions for me. I may go much further with my project than I had planned now!

Hee. :D

That would be awesome. So, what are the chances that you could write this "further project" into an article for The Oak or Tournaments Illuminated?

Semi-conjectural comment deleted. In summary: Tournaments Illuminated will increase in its rockingness, both exponentially and soon. Consider yourselves warned.

If you want help looking it over -- whether this ends up in The Oak, Tournaments Illuminated, Compleat Anachronist, Textile History, or lining the bottom of a birdcage :lol: lemme know. Happy to help.
Last edited by Karen Larsdatter on Tue Aug 29, 2006 3:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
James B.
Archive Member
Posts: 31596
Joined: Fri Jan 18, 2002 2:01 am
Location: Ashburn VA
Contact:

Post by James B. »

Karen when would you need something for the Oak? I am updating my Jack documentation.
James B.
In the SCA: Master James de Biblesworth
Archer in La Belle Compagnie
Historic Life
User avatar
Karen Larsdatter
Archive Member
Posts: 3104
Joined: Mon Dec 29, 2003 2:01 am
Location: Ashburn, VA
Contact:

Post by Karen Larsdatter »

James B. wrote:Karen when would you need something for the Oak? I am updating my Jack documentation.

Here's how to get in touch with the Oak editor -- she plans to put out the next issue in about a month or so, but now that The Oak doesn't need to put all of its efforts into fundraising before it can put out an issue, it'll be publishing more often.
Larsdatter.com: read the linkspages, and follow me on Facebook & Tumblr.
Post Reply