Hello, I am still in the middle of moving house and don’t have any Internet really but to make up for this, here’s a fabulous post by my chum Claire about Elizabeth I and fashion!
Elizabeth 1 – pomp and petticoats
As a long-time admirer of the Virgin Queen, I am always fascinated by portraits of Elizabeth 1 and what they can tell us about the theatricality and symbolism of her times.
When she came to power, in 1558, Elizabeth was 25 years old and facing numerous challenges to her authority, both at home and abroad. She was only the third woman ever to rule in her own right – and as the first two were ‘Bloody’ Mary and the short-lived Lady Jane Grey she had much to prove about the capabilities of the fairer sex.
(Princess Elizabeth, painted around 1546 by William Scrots)
In private Elizabeth dressed quite plainly, in simple gowns, and I love to imagine her retiring to her chambers and throwing off layers and layers of official finery before collapsing by the fire. However, in public Elizabeth always dressed to impress and carefully cultivated an image that spoke of power, majesty, splendour and generosity.
The Queen’s coronation portrait clearly shows her iconic red hair (which she later maintained using wigs) and her love of luxurious fabrics and jewels. As well as being enjoyed for their own sake, such materials were an obvious way of demonstrating class and status. The Elizabethans lived within a strict framework of ‘sumptuary laws’ designed to control behaviour and maintain a rigid class system. These laws reserved some fabrics and colours for royalty alone (including ermine and scarlet outerwear), allocated some to lesser nobles (such as fox and otter fur), and then prescribed further restrictions for each class of person.
(Coronation portrait, a copy painted around 1600 by an unknown artist)
In Elizabeth’s youth, court fashions still carried a hint of the medieval with trumpet sleeves and a narrow-shouldered silhouette, as can be seen in Scrots’ early portrait. But Elizabeth liked to shop around for her fashion inspirations and was soon importing tailors from across Europe. The result was a new shape, with form-fitting sleeves and wide, padded shoulders, reminiscent of the French and Spanish styles of the day.
Elizabeth often favoured black and white clothing, to symbolise virginity and purity, and always dressed her maids in complimentary fabrics to create a processional effect. It’s easy to imagine the Queen, seated on a raised dais, with her attendants ranged alongside her as a perennial bridal party but without a groom in sight!
(The Darnley Portrait, painted by an unknown artist around 1575)
It was certainly an exhausting job to get dressed in Elizabeth’s time. A noble lady might have to deal with all of the following garments before she could be deemed presentable:
- A linen chemise
- A corset, often stiffened with wood or iron (ouch)
- A petticoat
- A farthingale (hooped skirt stiffened with wood, rope or whalebone)
- A stomacher (triangular panel to decorate the front of the corset)
- A gown
- Separate sleeves, sometimes slashed so that a contrasting fabric could be seen underneath
- Neck and wrist ruffs
- Stockings and shoes (with heels in later years of Elizabeth’s reign)
- If going outside, a cloak, hat and gloves
- Accessories including fans, pomanders, earrings, necklaces, brooches, watches and personal prayer books.
(The Pelican Portrait, painted in 1575 by Nicholas Hilliard)
Many of these items would be richly embroidered with metallic thread and encrusted with precious and semi-precious stones, which apparently had an annoying habit of falling off – so the job of court cleaner must have had a few perks! Elizabeth’s costumes also became more elaborate (and heavy) as her reign progressed. Farthingales increased in size so that her skirts became wider and more imposing and the ruffs around her neck and wrists also became larger and more impressive – particularly after the process of starching fabric was discovered.
As a young girl Elizabeth had lived under a form of house arrest. The daughter of a disgraced Queen, who many viewed as illegitimate, she was largely kept out of public view and lived on a relatively small allowance from her father. It seems that some of the habits forged during her youth stayed with her as, although her court costumes were extravagant in appearance, Elizabeth spent less than most of her successors, kept highly detailed accounts of her wardrobe expenditure and was also an early proponent of recycling – often updating a piece by changing the sleeves or ripping out panels of fabric for re-use in new gowns.
Despite this cautious approach to expenditure, there is no doubting the power of the public image that Elizabeth created for herself. The Rainbow Portrait, which now hangs at one of her childhood homes, Hatfield House, is perhaps the best and most richly symbolic representation of her persona as untouchable and all-encompassing ruler.
(Rainbow Portrait, painted around 1600 by Isaac Oliver)
Although Elizabeth was in fact in her late sixties when this portrait was completed and died just three years later, the painter (wisely) depicts her as a younger woman. Her famous white skin is evident, achieved using a poisonous mixture of white lead and vinegar and designed to cover the scars from a bout of smallpox some forty years earlier.
Her crown sits on a headdress of rubies and pearls (more virgin symbolism) and her red hair cascades down in front of enormous neck ruffles towards some pretty impressive necklaces.
The painting also includes a wealth of other details, carefully chosen to reflect aspects of Elizabeth’s reign. The gown is embroidered with English wildflowers and the cloak is covered in eyes and ears – reminding the Queen’s subjects that she saw and heard everything that went on within her realm. A serpent, symbol of wisdom, slithers down one sleeve and in her right hand Elizabeth holds a rainbow, a symbol of peace and a reminder of how Elizabeth had unified the country after years of bitter religious division.
It is clear that Elizabeth was always one step ahead when it came to building and protecting her public image, and the many surviving portraits of this trailblazing Queen still pull the viewer in and command their attention.
Tags: Elizabeth I
























I hope that these super talented friends of yours once they have finished their remarkable posts are rushing around with large bottles of French wine and boxes of lavender ‘macarons’ to assist in the new-house-settling-in period.
Fascinating post about a remearkable woman.
The 1600 coronation portrait reminded me that I read years ago that Elizabeth I had a specific and very strong interest in her predecessor Richard II. If you look at the portrait of him which hangs in Westminster Abbey (which I believe is the earliest contemporary portrait of a British monarch) then I personally can see close similarities to Elizabeth’s coronation portrait.
I believe this matter of Elizabeth even identifying herself in some ways with Richard II was behind the controversial performance and banning of the play as it featured her predecessor being deposed and murdered in the Shakespeare work.
This is the portrait I mean
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Richard_II_King_of_England.jpg
Hi Annie, unfortunately Bristol is a bit too far for me to pop round but I’m certainly sending good thoughts!
Chris, I never knew that about Richard II but I certainly see what you mean about the coronation portrait.
Claire
Marvellous! And timely as i am reading Elizabeth I by margaret George currently!
Fascinating post! Many thanks to the lovely Claire.
Hope the moving is going well!
This portraits are superb, I love it.
xoxo…..M….:)
Great post Claire, even though Elizabeth had one of my ancestors brothers hung, drawn and quartered!
Fascinating post. I wrote an article for a magazine about how hard it would be to rip a bodice in the Elizabethan period and this post just illustrates why. I was struck by Elizabeth’s use of clothing when I was writing about Grace O’Malley in Scandalous Women, the contrast between Grace who probably wore the one good dress that she owned, probably years out of date, and Gloriana no doubt wearing her finest.
Thanks for all of your comments and sorry about your ancestor Jonathan…
Elizabeth, I imagine it would be nigh on impossible to rip through iron. Can you post a link to your article? I’d love to read it.
Claire
Its OK, he called her a heretic apparently! She still my favourite historical monarch!
Unfortunately the magazine never made it to print Claire, but it was fun to go through about 500 years of fashion history to point out which periods it might be possible to rip and bodice and which not.
Fascinating post. I had not seen many of these portraits. The amount of fine detail must have been quite a chore for the artists.
Thank you for the post.