КНИГИ НА АНГЛИЙСКИЙ ЯЗЫКЕ, ИМЕЮЩЕЕ ОТНОШЕНИЕ К СЛОВУ «LIRIPIPE»
Поиск случаев использования слова
liripipe в следующих библиографических источниках. Книги, относящиеся к слову
liripipe, и краткие выдержки из этих книг для получения представления о контексте использования этого слова в литературе на английский языке.
1
Hats: A History of Fashion in Headwear
67 French (1400) The hood had, indeed, now developed from the crown of the
head a lengthy tube which hung far down the back and was called a liripipe. Fig.
68 shows a labourer wearing a hood, gorget and liripipe which is represented in
...
2
Daily Life in Portugal in the Late Middle Ages
The chaperon was originally a hood worn close about the face with a long tail
called a liripipe; below, the chaperon lengthened into a very small cape reaching
the shoulders. The evolution of the chaperon into a hood-turban constitutes one
of ...
Antonio Henrique R. de Oliveira Marques, 1971
3
Medieval Costume and How to Recreate It
To the inner rim of this were transferred and adapted the liripipe and shoulder-
cape Of the old hood ; the latter gathered into folds and draped ad lih. over the
roundlet like a loose skirt, the former trailing on one side like a long scarf, which ...
4
Medieval Celebrations: Your Guide to Planning and Hosting ...
Men's hoods tended to be more elaborate than women's, having a long tail
known as a liripipe. These might be no more than a foot in length or might drag
on the floor; the longer the liripipe, the greater the SCARBOROUGH
RENAISSANCE ...
Daniel Diehl, Mark Donnelly, 2011
5
A Pictorial History of Costume From Ancient Times to the ...
Padded cap with long liripipe. The ringed mail-coat can be seen at the neck
under the plates of the armour. Fur-trimmed surcoat and cape round his
shoulders are decorated with armorial designs. 15. Young man of rank wearing
fur-trimmed ...
Wolfgang Bruhn, Max Tilke, 2013
6
Scenes and Characters of the Middle Ages
The man on the left has a pink short gown, trimmed with white fur; his hat, the two
ends of a liripipe hanging over his shoulders, and his purse and his hose, are
black. The man on his right has a long blue gown and red hat and liripipe ; the ...
7
All Things Medieval: An Encyclopedia of the Medieval World ...
Their liripipe hoods were brighter and patterned and had larger combs. Ifthey
wore a felt hat with a brim, it was parti-colored. Their headgear was an
advertisement for their profession; they lived in the spotlight, and they dressed to
look like ...
8
Scenes and Characters of the Middle Ages / Third Edition
The man on his right has a long blue gown and red hat and liripipe;theman
between them and a little infront,abrown long gown and blackhat. Theman on
horsebackontheleftwears avery short green gown, red hose, and blackhat; the
footman ...
9
Hatatorium: An Essential Guide for Hat Collectors
Liripipe -- one of earliest hats; a tube shaped cloth hat that folds over at the top
into a flattened cone draped to the side, worn my men in the 14th and 15th
Centuries. A stocking cap like that worn by Ebenezer Scrooge is an example of a
liripipe ...
Brenda Grantland & Mary Robak
10
Illustrated Handbook of Western European Costume: Thirteenth ...
The hood, with the face-opening placed on the head —the gorget and liripipe
hanging—started to be the most accepted form of male head-dress from the end
of the fourteenth century and remained popular for nearly a hundred years. In Fig.
НОВОСТИ, В КОТОРЫХ ВСТРЕЧАЕТСЯ ТЕРМИН «LIRIPIPE»
Здесь показано, как национальная и международная пресса использует термин
liripipe в контексте приведенных ниже новостных статей.
PHOTOS: St. Clair College Students Shine On Graduation Day
Dr. John Strasser places a liripipe on the left shoulder of the students graduating from their respective programs to signify the acceptance into ... «windsoriteDOTca News, Июн 15»
Tip your hat to the eternal trifecta of money, power and sex
Sex was added at the close of the Middle Ages, when men's headwear developed an erotic edge with the liripipe - a long, padded tail that ... «Sydney Morning Herald, Ноя 10»