Miss Green’s Class – Tudor Clothes Links

Tudor Clothes

We are currently researching all about what the Tudors would wear.

Here are some useful links and information:-

Rich and poor clothes

What did Tudors wear?                                           

Men and women’s clothes

Dress rich Tudor men and women in clothes you design!

Tudor Clothes

Primary facts

Ladies of the Royal Court

http://www.primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk/tudors/clothes.htm

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01dt9v8

https://www.dkfindout.com/uk/history/tudors/tudor-childhood/

http://www.medievalchronicles.com/medieval-clothing/tudor-clothes/

What did the poor wear?

  • Poor people needed clothes to keep warm. They wore any clothes they could find or were given.
  • Usually the clothes were made of wool and were very simple.
  • The colours were very dull and they were also very cheap.

Click on the link to see Horrible Histories transform a Tudor peasant into a Tudor Lord!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWzi9FOAaak

Tudor Underwear

The Farthingale

Tudor Ladies had Lots of Different Underwear

They wore:

    • Smock or chemise –  a short shift worn under a dress
    • Stockings or hose – clothing for legs
    • Corset – a garment with bones in it, designed to tighten the waist
    • Bodice – a sleeveless vest tightly laced in front
    • Farthingale – a linen petticoat with whalebone hoops
    • Roll or Rowle – tied around the waist widening the skirt
    • Stomacher – a triangular-shaped fabric that holds the dress together
    • Petticoat – a long draw-string skirt
    • Kirtle –  an underskirt
    • Forepart – a very decorated underskirt
    • Partlet –  was a high necked top designed to cover a low-necked dress

It must have taken hours to get dressed!

Want to try for yourself?  Click here to play the Tudor Dressing Up game.

Henry VIII – the world’s best dressed monarch?

Henry VIII’s wardrobe featured some of the world’s richest clothes and jewellery.  Click on the link to find out more

Tudor Shoes

Tudor streets were not covered with tarmac.  When it rained, and especially in winter, the streets would turn to thick mud. Towns and cities were very unhealthy places.  There were no proper sewers (except in Bristol) and all kitchen and toilet waste was thrown into the streets where it lay in heaps at street corners. It was very hard to keep your feet clean and dry under these conditions.  Shoes were very rarely waterproof so rain, snow and mud, let alone the sewage lying around would have made getting about on foot very unpleasant.

Several types of overshoe were devised to raise the foot further above the ground; these were known as “Pattens”, wooden shoes with blocks underneath which gave extra height to the wearer.  They were designed to be slipped on over an ordinary shoe.  Pattens first appeared in the 14th century and by Tudor times were worn by everybody.  These were very plain, which suggests that they belonged to the poorer classes.  Those belonging to a wealthy person would probably have had some decoration on the leather.

Miss Golland’s Class – Tudor Food

Tudor Food

We are currently researching all about the different foods that Tudors ate.

Here are some useful links that cover a range of topics:

http://history.parkfieldict.co.uk/tudors/tudor-food

www.historyonthenet.com/Tudors/food.htm

www.the-tudors.org.uk/tudor-food.htm

http://cookit.e2bn.org/historycookbook/1426-vegetable-pottage.html

http://primaryfacts.com/476/tudor-food-and-drink-facts-and-information/

http://www.elizabethi.org/contents/food/

 

Where did Tudor food come from?

http://primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk/tudors/food.html

http://history.parkfieldict.co.uk/tudors/farming-in-tudor-times

 

What did the poor eat?Rich and poor tudors ate very different foods from each other.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/clips/zdc4d2p

http://cookit.e2bn.org/historycookbook/1407-tudor-low-table-meal.html

 

What did the rich eat?

The link below will take you to a great BBC documentary all about preparing for a Tudor feast. This is one to watch at home as it is quite long!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeqnGvHNlV0

Other links:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/clips/zjbg9j6

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uqaa3fZVtas

 

What was a Tudor kitchen like?

http://www.primaryhomeworkhelp.co.uk/tudors/tudorkitchen.html

http://www.sixwives.info/tudor-kitchens.htm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwr68gROYM0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9igI-O2ENKs

Do you want to bake like a Tudor?

Here are some links to sites that will tell you all about baking in Tudor times:

http://tudortimes.co.uk/daily-life/bread-oats

http://cookit.e2bn.org/historycookbook/1406-bread.html

Below are a selection of links which will take you to Tudor recipes if you want to have a go yourself.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIu1x-Tme44

 

How did the Tudor diet affect people’s health?

Tudor diets weren’t particularly healthy and often caused problems for their health. The water was polluted and could be very harmful, the sweet fatty diet consumed by the rich caused their teeth to rot and the rubbish dumped outside houses encouraged rodents which spread the plague!

http://cookit.e2bn.org/historycookbook/32-339-tudors-Health-facts.html