Luxury Dress at Court in Early Modern France
Document type :
Autre communication scientifique (congrès sans actes - poster - séminaire...): Communication dans un congrès sans actes
Permalink :
Title :
Luxury Dress at Court in Early Modern France
Author(s) :
Conference title :
Courts and Luxury in the Early Modern World
Conference organizers(s) :
The European University Institute
Warwick Global History and Culture Centre
Monash University
Centro Studi Europa delle Corti
Warwick Global History and Culture Centre
Monash University
Centro Studi Europa delle Corti
City :
Fiesole
Country :
Italie
Start date of the conference :
2011-06-20
Keyword(s) :
Luxury
Dress
Fashion
French court
Early modern France
Luxe
Vêtements
Mode
Cour
France
Époque moderne
Dress
Fashion
French court
Early modern France
Luxe
Vêtements
Mode
Cour
France
Époque moderne
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Histoire
French abstract :
The aim of this paper is to make a clarification on the luxury dress at the Early Modern French Court. The glamorous image of the very fashionable Marie-Antoinette and the increase of publications about the sovereigns and ...
Show more >The aim of this paper is to make a clarification on the luxury dress at the Early Modern French Court. The glamorous image of the very fashionable Marie-Antoinette and the increase of publications about the sovereigns and their court, material culture, luxury trade and fashion could persuade that the court dress is well known. Paradoxically enough, French research has remained somewhat behind in this area of scholarship compared to the research carried out on the subject in Italy and Britain where the court studies are certainly a more autonomous field. But recent publications show that things are changing. I will focus on how the research has been done in France on the court luxury dress and on what we can actually say about this sartorial display. Appearances create at court specific dynamics of dressing as well as for the sovereigns as for their courtiers. Their luxurious sartorial display is ruled by the competition with foreign courts, by the calendar of the court life and by the hierarchy of ranks. It expresses also the aristocrats' liberality but it became for them a necessity to stay in the race to the power which was henceforth taking place at court. In this race for distinction, the sovereigns' clothing consumption widely exceeds the others. It means their extra-ordinary status. The institution of the royal wardrobe plays a fundamental role in the supply of the sovereigns' appearances. It certainly plays an important but not yet well known roleShow less >
Show more >The aim of this paper is to make a clarification on the luxury dress at the Early Modern French Court. The glamorous image of the very fashionable Marie-Antoinette and the increase of publications about the sovereigns and their court, material culture, luxury trade and fashion could persuade that the court dress is well known. Paradoxically enough, French research has remained somewhat behind in this area of scholarship compared to the research carried out on the subject in Italy and Britain where the court studies are certainly a more autonomous field. But recent publications show that things are changing. I will focus on how the research has been done in France on the court luxury dress and on what we can actually say about this sartorial display. Appearances create at court specific dynamics of dressing as well as for the sovereigns as for their courtiers. Their luxurious sartorial display is ruled by the competition with foreign courts, by the calendar of the court life and by the hierarchy of ranks. It expresses also the aristocrats' liberality but it became for them a necessity to stay in the race to the power which was henceforth taking place at court. In this race for distinction, the sovereigns' clothing consumption widely exceeds the others. It means their extra-ordinary status. The institution of the royal wardrobe plays a fundamental role in the supply of the sovereigns' appearances. It certainly plays an important but not yet well known roleShow less >
Language :
Anglais
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Administrative institution(s) :
CNRS
Université de Lille
Université de Lille
Submission date :
2021-04-02T14:14:36Z