An Leine Crioch -- The Irish Leine in the 16th century
Introduction
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A very brief overview of Irish dress
In the ancient legends (which were written down in the 6th century C.E.), the word léine (other historic spellings include léne, léinidh, lénni, léni, lenid, and the plural lénti) was used often to describe men and women's clothing. Many léinte are mentioned, but the shape of the garment is not described. Almost all of them are said to be wool and brightly coloured (brown-red, yellow, red, striped, and streaked are mentioned), but a few are described as linen or silk and some are white or gel ("bright"). The vast majority of these descriptions mention tons and tons of gold and red embroidery, from the chest to the knee in some cases(5). In the Middle Ages, Ireland was the hinterland, the desolate island to which monks migrated to get away from the evils of the world. It was not a center of fashion or commerce. The Vikings raided. The Normans invaded. Aside from accounts of battles and political maneouvres, very little is known about the social history of medieval Ireland. Their musical and narrative legacy is rich yet they provide us with little concrete evidence about how they lived. Aside from one extant garment in the National Museum of Ireland (the Moy gown), the derogatory texts of the Sassanach (Norman/English), and some highly stylized illustrations in manuscript illuminations, there is little evidence as to what they wore. We have no way to guess what the léine became during this period. As historians, we have all read references to "the distinctive dress of the Irish" which the English overlords railed against since, it seems, the beginning of recorded history. While we yearn to discover this style, we cannot fall prey to the practice of lumping the evidence from the 6th and 16th centuries together and filling in the blanks with guesses. We must not forget that there is a millennium of fashion evolution in between these two eras. To assume the léine remained the same over these thousand years is like saying that the 20th century English still dress like the Anglo-Saxons did before the Norman Invasion. As we shall see, the 6th and the 16th century léine could hardly be more different.Evidence of the léine in the 16th century
In clothing research, the word "léine" has come to be synonymous with the 16th century "saffron shirt" (léine croich) of the Irish and Highland Scots. It is in this context that we call the garment the "Man's Léine." In many periods of history women have borrowed fashions from men. The Woman's Léine is no different. Worn sometimes as a chemise under English style gowns and sometimes worn with nothing but a mantle, the woman's léine is simply a feminized version of the man's. As we shall see, its overriding characteristics are its length and the fullness of its sleeves. Despite the many wool items we have recovered from the peat bogs, a léine will never be found among them. This hardy garment, with its long history of being both revered and despised, was made out of linen, a fibre which does not survive burial in acidic (peaty) soil. All we have to memorialize it are these words and few illustrations. I hope I can contribute to its understanding with my research. The first mention of a saffron shirt comes from John Major's 1521 History of Britain."A medio crure ad pedem caligas non habent, chlamyde pro veste superiore et camisa croco tincta, amiciuntur... "
All this tells us is that they were wearing a yellow shirt (camisa). We will have to look further to discern what it looked like. The first documentary evidence of the shape and character of the léine is a letter from Henry VIII to the town of Galway, 28 April, 1536:"From the middle of the shin to the foot they do not have boots, in place of an upper garment they wrap a cloak around themselves and a shirt colored with saffron..." — Latin translation by Abigail Weiner
An ell in England in the 16th century has been interpreted as about a yard and a quarter of cloth.(3) Therefore, the léine was restricted to about 8 yards. This may not seem very restrictive to us. Modernly, our linen is 45" or 60" wide. Contemporary evidence suggests that the cloth used in Ireland in the 16th century was only 20" wide. This would mean that 5 ells equaled roughly 2 2/3 yards of 60" wide fabric or a little less than 4 yards of 45" wide. An act of Henry VIII forbade any person in Ireland after 1 May, 1539 to dress their hair in the Irish fashion or to:Item, that no man, woman, or child, do wear in their shirts or smocks, or any other garments, no saffron, nor have any more cloth in their shirts or smocks, but 5 standard ells of that country cloth.1
We can gather from these descriptions that the woman's léine was as full as the man's. We can also deduce that they were of a similar cut since they are lumped together in this legislation. Indeed, men and women's underdresses (chemises, smocks, kirtles...) were often unisex in design. Also apparent from these quotes is that the women were as "guilty" of dyeing with saffron as the men. We see further evidence of the Irish refusal to give up their large-sleeved léinte and conform to English styles in an ordinance proclaimed at Limerick in 1571 by Sir John Perot, President of Munster, which reads:...weare any shirt, smock, kerchor, bendel [band or ribbon], neckerchour, mocket [bib or handkerchief], or linnen cappe coloured, or dyed with Saffron, be yet to use, or weare in any of their shirts or smocks above seven yards of cloth to be measured according to the King's Standard, and that also no woman use or weare any kyrtell, or cote tucked up, or imbroydered or garnished with silke, or courched [overlaid, embroidered] ne layd with usker [usgar Irish for jewels], after the Irish fashion, and that no person or persons, of what estate, condition or degree they be, shall use, or weare any mantles, cote, or hood, made after the Irish fashion.2
It is obvious that the legislation of three decades before had not had the desired effect. It seems that the cloth restriction in the previous act was deemed too harsh for the nobler classes of society. An Act of Parliament at Dublin in 15413 limited the amount of linen cloth to be worn in the shirts of various classes thusly:... and no maid or single woman shall wear or put any great roll or kercher of linen cloth upon their heads, neither any great smock with great sleeves, but to put on hats, French hoods, tippets, or some other civil attire upon their heads.
To our modern senses, this is an immense amount of cloth. Why would they want to wear such a garment? Nothing ever develops in a vacuum. Even in remote Ireland, fashions were influenced by the clothing of other peoples. Wide and flowing floor-length garments, extravagant sleeves, pleating to excess - these are typical of the houppelandes of the previous century. From stone effigies in Ireland, we know that at least the Anglo-Irish ladies of the 15th century wore the houppelande. Léinte in the 16th century were reputedly made with 25-35 ells of linen. The Irish seem to have modified the continental style to suit their own tastes. The pendulous and bagpipe sleeves were also an element of early 15th century Continental dress. Apparently the 16th century léine was a continuation of this trend. Many verbal descriptions of the 16th century Irish mention their refusal to discard the clothing of previous eras and wear up to date, "civil attire". To understand what this plethora of fabric looked like, we must now turn to the pictorial evidence. The first we have for the man's léine is from a print in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, England. The picture is labeled "Irish Chieftains." No other copy exists and nothing is known about its origin. From other evidence it appears to have been drawn in the reign of Henry VIII. Some have conjectured that it depicts some of Henry's Irish recruits for his war with France in 1544. The details of this print are carefully drawn. A note on the border of the drawing claims that it was drawn in person as opposed to from memory (it is labeled: "after the quick" meaning "from life"). The men depicted in this print represent Irish kern (catharnach) or non-professional infantry soldiers of the Tudor period. They are all wearing long tunics with wide dangling sleeves and short, elaborately decorated jackets (ionar). Some wear mantles (brat). They all carry swords. All are similarly bare-legged and bare-footed. Their tunics appear to be pulled up to knee-length and "bloused" over a belt. This would afford more freedom of movement to the legs. Additionally, even when the arms are down, the sleeve, though reaching the mid-calf in length, comes no lower down the arm than the elbow. This curious yet functional element will be seen again in later prints. Note that no gathers or pleats are visible on the top of the arm. The shirts gape open in the front, exposing the kern's musculature and chest hair. No collar can be seen. Chronologically next come prints by Lucas de Heere, a Dutch painter who lived in England from 1567 to 1577. His pictures are carefully drawn and provide good detail. Although he never visited Ireland, it is believed that he copied his figures from other documentary evidence that is no longer extant. For example, his kern echo the poses and dress of the print in the Ashmolean Museum. Because of the similar level of detail in his women's clothing and how closely it resembles extant pieces, we can only assume that he had similar prints that have not surfaced. However, we know from a multitude of modern examples that copies are often imprecise. Keeping this in mind, we will examine de Heere's work.Noblemen 20 cubits (about 10 yards(3)) Vassal or horseman 18 cubits (9yds) Kerne (turbarius) or Scot 16 cubits (8yds) Groom, messenger or other servant of lords 12 cubits (6yds) Husbandman or labourer 10 cubits (5yds)





Note that Derricke focuses on the amount of pleating in the shirt. He mentions the sleeves separately in the next line and comments only on their length. The next documentary evidence of the léine is from Richard Stanihurst. Richard Stanihurst was the son of James Stanihurst, Recorder of Dublin. He was born into an English family that had been in Ireland since the 14th century. He had some reputation as a scholar and wrote a verse translation of Virgil. He wrote a "Description of Ireland" which appears in Holinshed's Chronicles, and a four-volume Latin work entitled De rebus in Hibernia gestis, published in 1584. The following is from the latter work:Their shirtes be verie straunge, not reaching paste the thie; With pleates on pleates thei pleated are as thick as pleates maie lye. Whose sleves hang trailing doune almost unto the Shoe; And with a Mantell commonlie, the Irish Karne doe goe.(4)
This doesn't give any detail, but it shows that a long-sleeved shirt was being worn by women at the time of Derricke and de Heere's prints. It also validates yellow as a colour for women's léinte (no illustrations show women in yellow léinte). An engraving in the first edition of Holinshed's Chronicle (published 1577) shows léine-clad Highland Scots bow-hunting deer in a forest. They wear the same elaborately decorated, short, leather jackets over long, full tunics. The tunics are bloused over a belt. The sleeves dangle to the knees or calves, but do not come any lower on the arm than the elbow joint. This representation of hunters clearly demonstrates the reason for the sleeve construction. The sleeves do not appear to hinder the bowman in any way. Neither do they appear to encumber the kern in the earlier prints. This was the Gaelic way of making a fashion statement (and a statement of wealth as well) while not sacrificing functionality.At meals they recline, couches being supplied. The first place at table is that of the mother of the family, wrapped in a tunic reaching to the ankles, often saffron-coloured and long-sleeved.
The Invention of Drawstrings and Pleated Sleeves
In all the evidence presented above, not one illustration depicts gathers, pleats, or drawstrings running along the top of the arm like those "léines" popular at SCA events and Ren Faires. There is a very good reason for this. In the late 1970s participants at the Renaissance Pleasure Faires in California invented the drawstring léine. This construction was an attempt to accommodate the tremendous amount of fabric reportedly used in the construction of a léine. The original version used a strip of trim or braid to hold the pleats in place so they would not have to be sewn individually. Later the drawstring construction created an even easier version. Sharon Devlin Folsom, founder of the Irish traditional music group, Sheila na Gig, researched and made all the costumes for her group in addition to playing harp, drum and singing. They performed at Renaissance Pleasure Faire North from 1976 to until the 1980s. She was there when the drawstring or gathered léine first appeared at the Faire. She writes: "Because of the strong theatrical/geographical influence, costuming at the faire was more along the lines of hollywood medievalish than authentic to begin with." In recent correspondence, Sharon told me:Her daughter, Branwyn M. Folsom, who has performed at Renaissance Pleasure Faire North since childhood, added her theories:I believe that the drawstring approach to léinte making developed out of the popularity of drawstring clothes in everyday life during the 60's and 70's, combined with the original, primarily theatrical focus of Faire costumes. The theatrical approach is primarily concerned with giving an impression of the period in question to assist the audience in the suspension of disbelief. The drawstring down the arm seems to have developed from a line of trim or stitching shown in carvings of pleated shirts.
Maggie Pierce Secara, who in the SCA is Mistress Máirghréad-Rós Fitzgaret of Desmond (O.L.), was also there to witness the "birth" of the drawstring léine. She has portrayed the Countess of Southampton at the Renaissance Pleasure Faire South for twelve years. She recalls a washerwoman character at the California Faire who put drawstrings in her chemise sleeves in order to keep them out of the well water. The washerwoman was also a member of the Irish/Scots camp and a Scottish country dancer which may have lead to the confusion about the Gaelic origins of her sleeve construction. Maggie-Rós claims to have contributed to the proliferation of the drawstring léine by writing an article for Tournaments Illuminated (vol 81, page 12) about this construction when she was editor of this journal. Entitled simply "The Leine", she says it has come back to haunt her many times:I would say that it has stuck around so long because of the dearth of available references to the contrary, and the variable, but often hot, climate in which most Ren Faires are held. The drawstring, is admittedly, a practical adaptation to a performing climate in which actors can be subjected to temperatures from 50 to 110 degrees F. The sleeves can be let down when the weather is inclement, and pulled up when it is hot. It's more comfortable to the modern person, but still not accurate.
Maggie-Rós has more than made amends. Her "Compendium of Common Knowledge -1558-1603" is a virtual treasure-trove and a must-read for any Elizabethan re-enactor. You can access it at ren.dm.net. When I asked her opinion on the construction of the léine, she said:Once or twice a year now I have to both apologize and try to talk people out of using that article as primary documentation.
I am indebted to Maggie-Rós, Sharon and Branwyn for sharing their memories with me so that we all might better understand the real origins this myth.There's no evidence for pleating on top of the arm. The drawstring trick was a specific invention of Clan MacColin's washer woman "working the well" at Southern Faire back in the late 70s-early 80s. And they told two friends. And they told two friends...
In Closing
I hope this article has helped you understand what the léine was and gave you some idea of how it may have been constructed in the 16th century. My best advice is "Don't trust any single source, not even this article." If you are interested in the historical documentation of the léine, go to the library and look up the sources in the references section (McClintock and Dunlevy both show the original illustrations). If you come up with anything different, contact me. I would love to hear what you have to say.Buy authentic patterns for the léine here.
Special thanks to Jennifer Munson and Abigail Weiner for going above and beyond the call of friendship in proofreading the text, Sheree Krasley for drawing the sketches, and all the visitors to my website for challenging and inspiring me.Bibliography
- Dunbar, J. Telfer. History of Highland Dress. Philadelphia: Dufour Editions, 1964.
- Dunlevy, Mairead. Dress in Ireland. New York: Holmes and Meier, 1989.
- Humbarger, Grant. Period Metrology. The Compleat Anachronist pamphlet series, Volume 81, September 1995.
- McClintock, Henry Foster. Old Irish and Highland Dress. Dundalk: Dundalgan Press, 1943.
- O'Curry, Eugene. On the Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish. London: Williams and Norgate, 1873.
Notes
- From Maxwell's Irish History from Contemporary Sources, page 366, as quoted in McClintock.(4)
- From a Collection of all the Statutes of in use in the Kingdom of Ireland, Dublin 1678, ibid.
- Calendar of Carew MSS, 1515-1574, Vol. 1, page 180-183, ibid.
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