Preview

Costumes of Canterbury Tales

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1704 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Costumes of Canterbury Tales
Rebecca Xie 00121144
Professor Hus
English Literature to 1800
May 9, 2013
The Costumes of the Characters in The Canterbury Tales
I. What I know from the reading.
In The Canterbury Tales, the pilgrims are from different social classes. These characters represent people in different social classes. When I was reading “General Prologue,” I found that these characters’ appearances are vividly described, especially for their costumes. It provoked my interest on medieval costumes. It starts form the Knight who has “Good horses but…wasn 't richly clad / [with] his fustian tunic [which] was a rusty sight / Where he had worn his hauberk” (line74-76). The knight has a youthful Squire who “[is] embroidered like a flowerbed /Or meadow, full of flowers white and red…and [his] gown was short, [while] his sleeves were long and wide.”(89-93) Lower than the Knight’s noble status, there are clergy among the pilgrims. I find the Monk “[whose] sleeves, I saw, were fur-lined at the hand / With gray fur of the finest in the land, / And fastening his hood beneath his chin. / There was a golden, finely crafted pin, / A love knot in the greater end for class.”(193-197) Also, a Friar “Dressed in a threadbare cope as students were, / But rather like a master or a pope./ He wore a double-worsted semicope/ As rounded as a church bell newly pressed.”(260-263)
Beside the clergy, I find that some of the middle class dress delicately and gorgeously. The bourgeoisie, earning fortune or educated well, enjoy the rising class status. For example, the Merchant, “[dressed] in a motley,” wears a “Flemish beaver hat…and boots most elegantly wrought.” (273-275) On the other hand, the costumes of those who are educated are plainer and simpler. For example, the Sergeant of the law “wore a simple multicolored coat/ Girt by a striped silk belt.” Also, the Physician “decked himself in scarlet and in azure, / With taffeta and silk.”(438-441)
When I move my eye to female characters, the lady



Cited: Geoffrey Chaucer. The Canterbury Tales. Trans. Ecker, and Eugene J. Crook. London: HODGE & BRADDOCK, 1993. Print. Chaucer 's Pilgrims and Their Clothing. The Regents of the University of Michigan. Web. February 2011. Medieval Fashion Glossary. Romance Reader at Heart. Web. May 2010. Medieval clothing. Annenberg Learner. Web. January 2013.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Imagine living in a society where your social and economic rank determined the type of clothing you could wear. Quite frankly, I would not have survived in a society that dictated what I can or cannot wear. I would feel suppressed, as if someone was taking away my freedom. I strongly believe that what we wear defines us more than we think. In other words, fashion is an expression of who we are as an individual. However, this was not the case during the medieval period. The clothing in medieval Europe was dictated by the Pyramid of Power or a feudal system. Fashion during the medieval period was not just only about clothing, rather it dealt with economic…

    • 619 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Before the Industrial Revolution, most families made their clothes themselves. Clothes had a special meaning to these people as told in Passage 2, "part of this practice took on a religious significance and was conducted in sacred spaces. Fabric itself could be very meaningful." The fabric was difficult to make, and as a result, was very expensive. Since the fabric was expensive, most cultures had a robe that was common among people, since robes wasted less fabric. There was no such thing as a zipper or even a button, so clothes were harder to get on and keep on. Clothes were not replaceable, they got handed down to each person in a family and merely got mended, to help save the money they didn't have.…

    • 373 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is a unique collection of tales from a virous group of individuals on a spiritual pilgrimage. Each person in the collection comes from all walks of life. For example Hubert the friar who knows the taverns in just about every town better than a poor house, a young man given the name The Clerk who spends every last cent he has on books, and a Doctor who is good at what he does and made a lot of money during the Plague. Every person is different in their own way but read carefully people of today could relate to one or more or even a bit of each one, whether it be their personalities, their looks or their beliefs. Whatever their reason, everyone on the pilgrimage have one thing in common. They are there to find…

    • 144 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    During the Elizabethan times, there were strict rules on what a person could or could not wear. These rules were based off a person's social and economic standing. These laws were called English Sumptuary laws . If violated, a person could lose land, be fined, lose their title, or even their life (Elizabethan sumptuary laws). The upper class was able to wear the most loquacious and elegant colors and designs. The trimming of cloaks, robes, and dresses were also assigned to…

    • 1013 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Most New England Colonists didn’t have a preference in what they wore. In Jamestown, colonists wore fancy clothes, while others wore tattered clothes with an interest in only finding gold and becoming rich. In the early 1700’s, men wore ruffs. Women wore frames formed of wood or whalebones underneath their dresses. Soon after, ruffs evolved into larger lace collars, although not many could afford such expensive clothes! As the 17th century went on, men began to wear knee length garments called “breeches.” They also wore long stockings and boots. They wore linen shirts and a kind of jacket called a “doublet” with a cape on the top. Men grew out their hair and grew beards. The doublet soon was replaced by the waistcoat. Men wore a frock coat over the waistcoats. Colonists used vegetable dyes to make bright colored clothes.…

    • 971 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the journey of Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer paints a vivid image of the medieval world. He brings forth three prominent concepts in the General Prologue, Pardoner's Prologue and Tale, and The Wife of Bath’s Tale. All tales satirically drenched with persuasive ideas, most would agree that his iconoclastic stories are dangerous for introducing aloud a different view on the church, gender relations and economic divisions. Creating doubt against the morals and true intentions of the church, bringing to light the inequality between genders and proposing a division between economic classes.…

    • 794 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    How people dressed during the sixteenth century was usually a good measure of their social class. In these times there were many changes in fashion, a lot of things were changing in this time period.In the early in the sixteenth century, the fashions that were most often seen were clothes that had a softer fabric like long flowing gowns, and by the end of the century the fashion…

    • 870 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of the many things that are different now from when Shakespeare was around is fashion. People dressed different. They dressed weird but to them that was the way it was. If you had layers of clothing it showed how wealthy, you were. Color described what class you were. Purple for example was very expensive so only people like the queen would wear it. Now we just put some jeans and a shirt on and call it good, though there is a way to classify someone from a lower class to a higher class. Now we have brands like Michal Kors, Versace, or Channel to show how…

    • 373 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Medieval World View Essay

    • 482 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Aristotle believes that “the earth is the center of the universe, and everything revolves around them” . This idea which is called Aristotle’s Universe was adopted by the medieval church and to challenge this view of the Universe was not merely a scientific issue; it became a theological one as well, and subjected dissenters to the considerable and not always benevolent power of the Church. So making people think that God put the earth at the center of the everything and the church being the peoples connection to God putting all the power into their…

    • 482 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, many characters go on a religious pilgrimage to Canterbury to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas Becket. On the way to Canterbury, each person on the journey tells a tale. Whoever tells the best story, gets rewarded a lavish free meal. The pilgrimage includes people from the nobility, clergy, and commoner class. For each class, Chaucer develops many different character types that were representative of the society of the time. With a broad spectrum of people and action, The Canterbury tales consists of many different ideas such as social satire, courtly love/ chivalry,morality, and corruption and deceit. One of the most important ideas of the story is that Chaucer puts forward a criteria that…

    • 1909 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Geoffrey Chaucer, in his Canterbury Tales, felt that the Church's turmoil experienced during the fourteenth century contributed to the a declining trust of clergy and left the people spiritually devastated. The repeated epidemics that the European Church experienced weakened the church by highlighting the clergy's inability to face adversity. The clergy's inability to provide relief for the people during a period of suffering did not turn people away from the church, but it did cause the people to question the value of the Church's traditional practices. People looked for ways to gain greater control over their own spiritual destines and altered their perception of the clergy, who were too weak to bring the people complete salvation. (Bisson51-52) "The times are out of joint, the light of faith grows dim; the clergy are mostly ignorant, quarrelsome, idle, and unchaste, and the prelates do not correct them because they themselves are no better." (Coulton 296) In The Canterbury Tales Chaucer makes us highly aware of the clergy's obvious and hidden intensions. Chaucer shows his awareness of the shortcomings of the Church in his portrayal of those who exercise spiritual authority during the pilgrimage. (Bisson 51-52)…

    • 1153 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Canterbury Tales

    • 528 Words
    • 2 Pages

    After reading the Canterbury Tales and the General Prologue, I learned a lot about all of the Pilgrims. The pilgrim that I found the most interesting was the Pardoner, which is why I chose to use him for my project.…

    • 528 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    First of all, the design of the women’s dresses during the Renaissance era is really exquisite because of their shape, structure, and color sense. Clothing during the Renaissance period was more about displaying one’s social status. The rich would wear clothes in expensive fabrics such as silk and brocade, which were used for clothing during the Renaissance period. Women’s fashion saw an evolution during…

    • 1286 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Prioress, the Friar, and the Miller in the Prologue to The Canterbury Tales provide exceptional examples of what H.S. Bennett meant when he asserted that ‘no detail was too small” for Chaucer to see.…

    • 336 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Proloue to Canterbury Tales

    • 17725 Words
    • 71 Pages

    The Canterbury Tales is the most famous and critically acclaimed work of Geoffrey Chaucer, a late-fourteenth-century English poet. Little is known about Chaucer’s personal life, and even less about his education, but a number of existing records document his professional life. Chaucer was born in London in the early 1340s, the only son in his family. Chaucer’s father, originally a property-owning wine merchant, became tremendously wealthy when he inherited the property of relatives who had died in the Black Death of 1349. He was therefore able to send the young Geoffrey off as a page to the Countess of Ulster, which meant that Geoffrey was not required to follow in his ancestors’ footsteps and become a merchant. Eventually, Chaucer began to serve the countess’s husband, Prince Lionel, son to King Edward III. For most of his life, Chaucer served in the Hundred Years War between England and France, both as a soldier and, since he was fluent in French and Italian and conversant in Latin and other tongues, as a diplomat. His diplomatic travels brought him twice to Italy, where he might have met Boccaccio, whose writing influenced Chaucer’s work, and Petrarch.…

    • 17725 Words
    • 71 Pages
    Good Essays