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Title:
dress
Object name(s):
dress; WOMEN'S CLOTHING - main garments
Brief description:
This elaborate court mantua from the 1720s possibly belonged to Lady Rachel Morgan, the wife of Sir William Morgan of Tredegar House, near Newport. Lady Rachel was the daughter of the Duke of Devonshire, and brought with her a dowry of £20,000. In the 1790s her descendants invested in industrial projects. They opened coal mines and iron works on their land and built canals and tramways. The mantua consists of an open-fronted gown and a matching petticoat. The blue damask, which is heavily embroidered with silver thread, was woven at Spitalfields in London, an area once known for its silk weavers and mercers. Although the gown was altered during the 1800s, probably to wear as fancy dress, it remains an outstanding example of its kind.
Collection:
Amgueddfa Cymru - Museum Wales
Acquisition method:
Donation
Dimension:
height (mm):1400
Dimension:
width (mm):2000 (max)
Dimension:
depth (mm):1500 (max)
Material:
damask (silk)
Material:
metal thread
Material:
silver
Material:
parchment
Material:
flax (spun and twisted)
Material:
silk (spun and twisted)
Number of objects:
1
Object name:
dress; WOMEN'S CLOTHING - main garments
Object production date:
1720s
Object production date:
Date - earliest / single:
1/1/1720
Date - latest:
31/12/1729
Object production place:
England
Other number:
23.189.1
Other number type:
accession number
Other number:
Micromusée V6 SN:41781
Other number type:
other
Ownership dates:
1720s
Ownership place:
Tredegar House
Place status:
wear
Reproduction number:
media-50847
Reproduction number:
media-61869
Reproduction number:
media-61870
Reproduction number:
media-61871
Reproduction number:
media-61872
Reproduction number:
media-61873
Reproduction number:
media-61874
Reproduction number:
media-107812
Reproduction number:
media-107821
Reproduction number:
media-107822
Reproduction number:
media-107823
Reproduction number:
media-107824
Reproduction number:
media-107825
Reproduction number:
media-107826
Reproduction number:
media-107827
Reproduction number:
media-107828
Reproduction number:
media-107829
Reproduction number:
media-107830
Reproduction number:
media-107831
Reproduction number:
media-107832
Reproduction number:
media-107833
Reproduction number:
media-107834
Reproduction number:
media-107835
Reproduction number:
media-107836
Reproduction number:
media-107837
Reproduction number:
media-107838
Reproduction number:
media-107839
Reproduction number:
media-107840
Reproduction number:
media-107841
Reproduction number:
media-107842
Reproduction number:
media-107843
Reproduction number:
media-107844
Reproduction number:
media-107845
Reproduction number:
media-107846
Reproduction number:
media-107847
Reproduction number:
media-107848
Reproduction number:
media-107849
Reproduction number:
media-107850
Reproduction number:
media-107851
Reproduction number:
media-107852
Reproduction number:
media-107853
Reproduction number:
media-107854
Reproduction number:
media-107855
Reproduction number:
media-107856
Reproduction type:
image
Technique:
metal thread embroidery
Technique:
hand sewn
Technique:
weaving
User's reference:
pp. 48-52. Copy in accession file.
Reference type:
bibliography
User's reference:
Lou Taylor, Establishing Dress History (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2004), p. 268. "Famously the museum also owns a vast hooped, brocaded silk gown worn by Lady Rachel Morgan in the 1718-24 period. Madeleine Ginsburg believed this to be a 'comparable' piece both to the future Empress Catherine's wedding dress in the Hermitage and to 'the most magnificent dress' in the V&A's collection, a vast English Court dress of the 1740s".
Reference type:
bibliography
User's reference:
M. R. Apted, 'Social Conditions at Tredegar House, Newport, in the 17th and 18th Centuries', The Monmouthshire Antiquary 3:2 (1972-3), pp. 124-54.
Reference type:
bibliography
User's reference:
Christine Stevens, 'Packages lately come from London: English Silks Worn by Welsh Gentry', Riggisberger Berichte 8 (2000), pp. 75-83. '...This garment had been remade and worn as fancy dress, probably during the 19th century, and was displayed in the National Museum in the late 1920s in an incorrect form. In 1971 it was returned to its original form, with the help of Janet Arnold, who has published a charted pattern. The later stitching was removed, which involved unpicking bust darts and the removal of stitching where the train had been caught up in several places, presumably to hide the fact that part of the train had been cut away. The front skirt had to be arranged carefully to allow the silver embroidery to show all around the petticoat. The petticoat itself had not been altered.' Copy in accession file.
Reference type:
bibliography
User's reference:
Avril Hart, 'The mantua: its evolution and fashionable significance in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries' in Amy de la Haye & Elizabeth Wilson (eds), Defining Dress: Dress as object, meaning and identity (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1999), pp. 93-103. Copy in accession file.
Reference type:
bibliography

Persistent shareable link for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/94296c95-6cdb-3b21-8bc6-133867610992

Use licence for this record: CC BY-NC

Attribution for this record: https://museumdata.uk/objects/94296c95-6cdb-3b21-8bc6-133867610992, Amgueddfa Cymru - Museum Wales, CC BY-NC

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