From the Shetland Museums leaflet (3) |
Last month I
attended the Knitting History Forum conference, and one of the speakers was Dr.
Carol Christiansen, Textile Curator at the Shetland Museum and Archives, she
spoke on the re-construction of the Gunnister Man clothing. The project to
re-construct the clothing was a joint venture involving, among others, Carol
Christiansen, Martin Ciszuk, of the School of Textiles, University of Borås,
Sweden, and Lena Hammarlund, craftsperson and textile researcher, from Göteborg,
Sweden, and was completed in 2009. Some of this was reported at NESAT XI (1)
and some at the European Textile Forum. (2)
Also the Shetland museum service
has produced a leaflet, which shows the re-created clothing, complete with
mends, patches, etc. (3)
Background
A lone burial
containing the body of a man, or to be more precise the clothing of a man the
body having disappeared, was found at Gunnister in Shetland in 1951. As Carol
said most of the report written at that time by Henshall and Maxwell (4) still
stands. The body probably dates to the very end of the 17th century,
early 18th century. The purse he was carrying contains three coins,
one Swedish dated 1683, and two Dutch from 1681 and 1690. Gunnister Voe, itself
was one of a number of extremely small ports operating at the end of the
Hanseatic League period. It is about two miles distant from the burial, and it traded
with Dutch, Swedish and German merchants. The site at Gunnister Voe has been
excavated, but very little was found there. (5, 6)
The burial
The bulk of
what survived in the burial is the woollen clothing, which is very heavily
patched, so that there are 20 different fabrics represented. The non-clothing
items were a wooden stick, a small wooden bucket (16.25 cm diameter by 14.5 cm
high), two other small pieces of wood, a wooden knife handle, a horn spoon and
another piece of horn, a quill (analysis showed that it had ink on it), and the
coins. Non fabric items of clothing
were, four pieces of a leather belt with a brass buckle, and a very few
fragments where rivlin type shoes would have been.
The clothing
The
clothing is with the National Museums of Scotland, but was returned to Shetland
for the period of the project and the exhibition that followed. They are now
back with the NMS.The garments were all closely examined in order to decide
what wools to use, and various wools were tested including Shetland, Herdwick
and Gammelnorsk (an old Scandinavian breed). A dye analysis proved
inconclusive. One conclusion was that the clothing had been obtained over a
considerable period of time, and from many different places. As has already
been mentioned the clothing was heavily patched and the feet on the stockings
had been completely replaced.
For
the reconstruction of the clothing Lena worked on the spinning and weaving of
yarn and cloth. Martin worked on the cutting and sewing of the woven items, and
Carol and Lena worked on reproducing the knitted items. As Carol was talking
mainly about the knitted items some garments were hardly mentioned, however I
have linked to the SCRAN – the National Museums of Scotland – database entries
for each garment below:
The shirt
This was not
mentioned by Carol in her talk. It is of wool and fastens from the waist to
neck with ten buttons of wool covered in cloth. (4) All the buttons on the
Gunnister clothing were wool covered with cloth.
The shirt –
back view http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-190-000-792-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The shirt –
front view http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-001-395-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The jacket
and coat
The shorter
jacket was being worn over the longer coat. The low decorative pocket slits on
the coat were sewn shut, and the turn back cuffs on the coat were rolled down.
Carol also mentioned that the stockings appeared to have been sewn to the
bottom edge of the coat. She conjectured that these alterations may have been
against the cold, and pointed out that the 1690s saw some very bad weather.
The jacket –
back view http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-190-001-912-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The jacket –
front view http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-102-318-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The coat http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-001-394-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The breeches
The breeches
had had pocket bags on either side, which had disappeared and therefore were
probably made of linen or leather. The waist had been altered by taking in 5
inches. The breeches had a fly front, fastened with only one button at the
waist.
The breeches http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-001-396-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The stockings
As mentioned
before the stockings appear to have been attached to the lower edge of the coat
with thick two ply wool. The stockings had been mended at the knees, but more
obviously the feet had been replaced, in one case with the leg of another,
finer knit, stocking. Carol said that the knitting on the main stocking legs
was 2.9 to 3.2 stitches to the cm, and 4 to 5 rows to the cm. They had a
decorative false seam at the back, and the calf shaping was worked every four
rows.
The stockings
http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-001-399-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The stockings
– a closer view of the http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-190-002-039-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The cap with
a brim
This was the
cap he was wearing. This was white and, according to Carol, the pattern in
Henshall is incorrect. The cap was 56 cm in circumference and 17 cm from crown
to edge. It was knitted at 3.5 stitches to the cm and 3.75 to 4.5 rows to the
cm.
The cap with
a brim http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-001-397-C&scache=2ejz050e25&searchdb=scran
The
cap without a brim.
This
was the cap that was in a breast pocket of the coat. The shaping, which
produces a sort of cross at the crown, is similar to that of a Svabald example.
The cap has a boucle effect inside. Testing produced the same boucle effect
when a Shetland wool was mixed with primitive Scandinavia wool, and then
fulled. This cap was knitted at 3 to 3.25 stitches and 4 to 4.5 rows to the cm.
The cap
without a brim http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-001-398-C&scache=2ejzx50e2c&searchdb=scran
The purse
The purse is
grey-brown with a pattern in white and red. It is 10cm by 13.5cm and was
knitted in the round with the bottom being knit together. It has 4.5 stitches
and 6 rows to the cm. There is a cast on row, then a knit row, before the 13
loops that carry the drawstring. My attempt at the Gunnister purse, done before
I attended the talk, is shown right.
The purse http://nms.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-100-001-401-C&searchdb=scran&scache=2ejzx50e2c
The gloves
The gauge
given in Henshall for knitting the gloves is incorrect The gloves were knitted
at 3 stitches and 4.5 rows per cm in white wool. They have a decorative design
of three lines on the back of the hand. The gauntlet has a decorative design
involving rows of garter stitch, stocking stitch and purl stitch. Henshall
gives this as “6 rows of garter stitch, 5 of stocking stitch, 5 of garter
stitch, 6 of stocking stitch, 3 purl rows separated by 2 plain rows, 8 of
stocking stitch, 5 of garter stitch, with decreases along the outer side.”
Bibliography
1. North European Symposium for Archaeological
Textiles, 10-13 May 2011, Esslingen am Neckar, Germany. Carol’s abstract is available
from; http://www.nesat.de/nesat_11_esslingen/abstracts/lecture_christiansen.pdf
2. Ciszuk, M
and Hammarlund, L. 2013. Tracing Production Processes and Craft Culture: the
reconstruction of the Gunnister Man costume. In: Ancient textiles, modern
science : re-creating techniques through experiment : proceedings of the First
and Second European Textile Forum 2009 and 2010; edited by Heather Hopkins. Oxford: Oxbow
3..Shetland
Museums and Archives. 2009. Gunnister Man A life reconstructed. (Watch it,
because it is designed to fold into a leaflet the first bit is upside down.)
4. Henshall, A. S. and Maxwell, S. 1952. Clothing and other articles from a late
17th-century
grave at Gunnister, Shetland.
Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 1951-52, 30-42. Available
from: http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archiveDS/archiveDownload?t=arch-352-1/dissemination/pdf/vol_086/86_030_042.pdf link)
5. Queen’s
University Belfast. 2010. Gunnister: excavations of a German trading site at Gunnister Voe, Shetland.
Available from:
6. Gardiner,
M. and Mehler, N. 2010. The Hanseatic trading site at Gunnister Voe, Shetland
Post Medieval Archaeology, 44 (2) 347-349.
Available from: https://www.academia.edu/690244/Excavations_at_the_hanseatic_trading_site_at_Gunnister_Shetland._Post-Medieval_Archaeology_44_2_2010_347-349