Page:Textile fabrics; a descriptive catalogue of the collection of church-vestments, dresses, silk stuffs, needle-work and tapestries, forming that section of the Museum (IA textilefabricsde00soutrich).pdf/96

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part cloth of gold figured elaborately, some with lions and double-headed eagles, others, for example, with the death and burial of our Lord—"campus aureus cum leonibus et aquilis bicapitibus de aurifilo contextis—campus rubeus cum historia Passionis Domini et sepulturæ ejusdem." These designs speak of the looms at work in the middle ages on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean, and we are much strengthened in this thought by beholding how the death and burial of our Lord, like the sample here, number 8278, p. 170-1, are shown on a crimson ground, as we shall have to instance further on under Symbolish, § VI.

That this sort of stuff, wove of silk and gold, was of any kind of Arras, or made in that town, to our seeming is a very unhappy guess. Arras had not won for itself a reputation for its tapestry before the fourteenth century. Tapestry itself is too thick and heavy for use in vestments; yet this cloth of Areste was light enough for tunicles, and when worn out was sometimes condemned at St. Paul's to be put aside for lining other ritual garments—"ad armaturam faciendam."[1] The term "Areste" has little or nothing in it common to the word "Arras," as written either in French, or under its Latin appellation "Atrebatum."

Among the three meanings for the mediæval "Aresta," one is, any kind of covering. To us, then, it seems as if these cloths of Areste took their name not from the place whereat they had been wove, but from the use to which, if not always, for the most part, we put them—that of hangings about our churches, since in the St. Paul's inventory they are usually spoken of as such—"culcitræ pendules, panni penduli."[2] Moreover, tapestry, or Arras work, being thick and heavy, could never have been employed for such light use as that of apparels, nor would it have been diapered like silk, yet we find it to have been so fashioned and so used—"maniculariis apparatis quodam panno rubeo diasperato de Laret, &c."[3]

For not a few it would be hard to understand some at least among those epithets meant in bygone days to tell how


Silks were distinguished through their colours and shades of colour.

To the inventories of vestments and church-stuffs of all sorts must we go to gather the information which we want about the textiles in use in this country at any particular period during by-gone days. The men

  1. St. Paul's Cathedral, ed. Dugdale, 329.
  2. Ibid. p. 329.
  3. Ibid. p 335.