1. Visions of Dress: Recreating Bronze Age Clothing from the Danubian Region.
- Author
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GRÖMER, KARINA, RÖSEL-MAUTENDORFER, HELGA, and JØRGENSEN, LISE BENDER
- Subjects
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PREHISTORIC clothing , *BRONZE Age , *EXPERIMENTAL archaeology , *PREHISTORIC jewelry , *ANTIQUITIES - Abstract
This article highlights and discusses the challenges of recreating the clothing of a wealthy Bronze Age woman from Winklam in Austria. She was buried with jewelry and dress fittings that appear almost theatrical, such as a wide belt of bronze, extremely long pins, and a collar consisting of fourteen spiked bronze pendants. A series of different sources underpin suggestions of what her dress might have looked like: placement patterns of jewelry in Bronze Age graves from Central Europe; Bronze Age iconography; textures of Bronze Age textiles, including a group of completely preserved garments from Denmark; and tailoring principles. Each of these sources has its own rules and pitfalls. Do the remnants of clothing we find in the graves represent garments worn in daily life, or garbs for burial? To what degree do stylized human images in Bronze Age art depict the shapes and decoration of "real" clothing? How can we use complete outfits of clothing found in oak-log coffin graves in Denmark, far away from Central Europe? A series of experiments has been carried out in order to investigate how the lady of Winklam may have been dressed. The appearance of the resulting outfits is discussed, focusing on perception, visual appearance, and the interplay between clothing, dress accessories, textures, decoration, colors, and glittering bronzes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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