Stuart Style: monarchy, dress and the Scottish male elite,
by Maria Hayward. Yale University Press, 2020, £35. ISBN 978 0 300 24036 8
This work by Maria Hayward focuses on the clothing choices
and influences of five male Stuart royals: King James VI & I (1566-1625),
Henry, Prince of Wales (1594-1612), King Charles I (1600-1649), King Charles II
(1630-1685) and King James VII & II (1633-1701), and expands this to how it
affected the clothing choices of their courtiers, officers and servants.
The first section of the book, entitled ‘The evolution and
significance of Stuart style’, gives each of these five men a chapter,
examining their individual styles, and the influences upon them. With James VI
& I the author points out that many dress histories look only at James’s
time as King of England, and ignoring his time as King of Scotland. Also
examined are the influences of their Scottish heritage in the styles they
developed, and what was and wasn’t exported to England and specifically to
London.
The second section is entitled ‘Creating the Stuart look.’
This looks at how the Stuarts chose their textiles and clothes, at who supplied
the items, their tailors, embroiderers, jewellers and perfumiers, and also at
how the clothes were maintained, ranging from the role of the gentlemen of the
robes through to the laundresses. There is also a chapter on the Stuart use of
jewellery, and on the use and wearing of honours; the Garter, the Andrew and
the Order of the Thistle.
The third and final section is entitled clothes on show: the
space and places of Stuart masculine display. This covers the importance of the
King’s bedchamber and dressing rooms, and how what was worn could be used to
impress, to make a statement, or to show an allegiance. The importance of
religion and the ceremonial in what was worn is also examined, together with
the markers of life, from christenings to funerals and mourning.
The book is extremely well illustrated, with a timeline at
the end matching decades to fashionable garments, linens and accessories.