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Devonshire Hunting Tapestries
The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries are a group of four medieval tapestries, probably woven in Arras, Artois, France, between about 1430 and 1450. The tapestries are known as Boar and Bear Hunt, Falconry, Swan and Otter Hunt, and Deer Hunt. These enormous works, each over 13 feet tall and altogether about 133 feet wide, depict men and women in fashionable dress of the early fifteenth century hunting in forests. The tapestries formerly belonged to the Dukes of Devonshire, and were hung on the walls at Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire. In 1957, they became the property of the British Government in the tax settlement after the death of the 10th Duke of Devonshire. The tapestries were then allocated to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, where they remain. Few fifteenth-century tapestries of this size and grandeur still exist, which is what makes the Devonshire Hunting Tapestries so exceedingly rare.
Tapestries were a popular luxury good that used visual imagery to entertain and delight the audiences of aristocratic households. The wealthy used tapestries to cover entire walls, which had a practical use because they aided in insulation during colder months.
The sport of hunting was a common subject in tapestries as well as a favored activity amongst the elite members of society. Hunting was both a stylized sport and an important source of meat highly prized by the nobility. The sport also reinforced aristocratic ideas of class, since the elite form of hunting was only available for the landowner. Hunting was so prized by the nobility that there were forest laws, to protect the landowners's rights against poaching. Any rule-breaking poachers faced expensive fines or worse. In particular, deer and boar were protected by forest law in England, and in Portugal, bears were protected.
Royal hunts were not an everyday occurrence and were more of a performance. Though hunting was primarily reserved for members of the court, they were often not the ones engaging in the act of locating, chasing, and capturing the animals. The nobility often had huntsmen who would routinely hunt and bring back meat for the royals to enjoy, but who also located and corralled live animals for the royals to then hunt. The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries show various animal hunts, but the nobles who take place in them are in their finest dress, which they might not in reality have worn for such an activity. The four hunting tapestries are therefore not the most accurate representation of hunting, but instead depict the fantasy of a noble, leisurely pastime enjoyed by the wealthy. The tapestries reinforce the hierarchy of class and humankind’s dominance over animals.
The tapestries would have been produced by a large workshop of skilled weavers, working to designs made by an artist. Neither the designer nor the workshop can be identified, as is common at this period. Though considered as a set, the four tapestries were created at different times. The specific style of dress in each tapestry can help to identify the time it was made. The Boar and Bear Hunt shows costume c. 1425-30. Both Falconry and the Swan and Otter Hunt show costume c. 1430s. The Deer Hunt primarily shows costume c. 1440-1450, but with two costumes c. 1435, indicating that the piece was likely made in the 1440s. Furthermore, the tapestries all vary in size.
The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries were created on two types of looms: high-warp loom and low-warp loom. Weavers use an illustration, known as a cartoon, as the design reference for the tapestry. For low-warp loom, the cartoon was below the threads, allowing the weaver to easily look at it. For high-warp loom, the cartoon was displayed away from the loom, requiring weavers to be familiar with the work to not constantly be looking away from the tapestry to the cartoon. Low-warp loom can create errors since the weaver has to work in reverse. Such is the case with the Boar and Bear Hunt, considered low-warp, which has errors of reversed inscriptions and two left-handed men, probably unintended. Falconry and Otter and Swan are considered high-warp.
The Boar and Bear Hunt is 13 ft 3.5 in by 33 ft 6 in. On the left side, the boar hunts take place and in the centre and the right side, the bear hunts take place. The men are shown carrying spears, which have cross-bars designed to stop the charge of the boar and keep its tusks at a safe distance. The bears are also hunted on foot with spears. The lady crossing the stream in the centre foreground has "Monte le Desire" inscribed on her flowing sleeve. However, weaving on a low-warp loom has reversed the letters.
The boar was viewed as the exact opposite of the deer in the Middle Ages, with the boar considered more beastly. Boars were known to attack hunting dogs. Though boar hunting was not as highly regarded as deer hunting, the meat was still desired for banquets and celebrations. Bear hunting was not for meat, but rather to prevent attacks on farm animals, and for fur. Hunters and their hounds might seek out the bear in its cave, as can be seen on the right side of the tapestry where a bear and its cubs reside in a cave. However by this period, bears were rare in Flanders, and extinct in Britain.
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Devonshire Hunting Tapestries AI simulator
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Devonshire Hunting Tapestries
The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries are a group of four medieval tapestries, probably woven in Arras, Artois, France, between about 1430 and 1450. The tapestries are known as Boar and Bear Hunt, Falconry, Swan and Otter Hunt, and Deer Hunt. These enormous works, each over 13 feet tall and altogether about 133 feet wide, depict men and women in fashionable dress of the early fifteenth century hunting in forests. The tapestries formerly belonged to the Dukes of Devonshire, and were hung on the walls at Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire. In 1957, they became the property of the British Government in the tax settlement after the death of the 10th Duke of Devonshire. The tapestries were then allocated to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, where they remain. Few fifteenth-century tapestries of this size and grandeur still exist, which is what makes the Devonshire Hunting Tapestries so exceedingly rare.
Tapestries were a popular luxury good that used visual imagery to entertain and delight the audiences of aristocratic households. The wealthy used tapestries to cover entire walls, which had a practical use because they aided in insulation during colder months.
The sport of hunting was a common subject in tapestries as well as a favored activity amongst the elite members of society. Hunting was both a stylized sport and an important source of meat highly prized by the nobility. The sport also reinforced aristocratic ideas of class, since the elite form of hunting was only available for the landowner. Hunting was so prized by the nobility that there were forest laws, to protect the landowners's rights against poaching. Any rule-breaking poachers faced expensive fines or worse. In particular, deer and boar were protected by forest law in England, and in Portugal, bears were protected.
Royal hunts were not an everyday occurrence and were more of a performance. Though hunting was primarily reserved for members of the court, they were often not the ones engaging in the act of locating, chasing, and capturing the animals. The nobility often had huntsmen who would routinely hunt and bring back meat for the royals to enjoy, but who also located and corralled live animals for the royals to then hunt. The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries show various animal hunts, but the nobles who take place in them are in their finest dress, which they might not in reality have worn for such an activity. The four hunting tapestries are therefore not the most accurate representation of hunting, but instead depict the fantasy of a noble, leisurely pastime enjoyed by the wealthy. The tapestries reinforce the hierarchy of class and humankind’s dominance over animals.
The tapestries would have been produced by a large workshop of skilled weavers, working to designs made by an artist. Neither the designer nor the workshop can be identified, as is common at this period. Though considered as a set, the four tapestries were created at different times. The specific style of dress in each tapestry can help to identify the time it was made. The Boar and Bear Hunt shows costume c. 1425-30. Both Falconry and the Swan and Otter Hunt show costume c. 1430s. The Deer Hunt primarily shows costume c. 1440-1450, but with two costumes c. 1435, indicating that the piece was likely made in the 1440s. Furthermore, the tapestries all vary in size.
The Devonshire Hunting Tapestries were created on two types of looms: high-warp loom and low-warp loom. Weavers use an illustration, known as a cartoon, as the design reference for the tapestry. For low-warp loom, the cartoon was below the threads, allowing the weaver to easily look at it. For high-warp loom, the cartoon was displayed away from the loom, requiring weavers to be familiar with the work to not constantly be looking away from the tapestry to the cartoon. Low-warp loom can create errors since the weaver has to work in reverse. Such is the case with the Boar and Bear Hunt, considered low-warp, which has errors of reversed inscriptions and two left-handed men, probably unintended. Falconry and Otter and Swan are considered high-warp.
The Boar and Bear Hunt is 13 ft 3.5 in by 33 ft 6 in. On the left side, the boar hunts take place and in the centre and the right side, the bear hunts take place. The men are shown carrying spears, which have cross-bars designed to stop the charge of the boar and keep its tusks at a safe distance. The bears are also hunted on foot with spears. The lady crossing the stream in the centre foreground has "Monte le Desire" inscribed on her flowing sleeve. However, weaving on a low-warp loom has reversed the letters.
The boar was viewed as the exact opposite of the deer in the Middle Ages, with the boar considered more beastly. Boars were known to attack hunting dogs. Though boar hunting was not as highly regarded as deer hunting, the meat was still desired for banquets and celebrations. Bear hunting was not for meat, but rather to prevent attacks on farm animals, and for fur. Hunters and their hounds might seek out the bear in its cave, as can be seen on the right side of the tapestry where a bear and its cubs reside in a cave. However by this period, bears were rare in Flanders, and extinct in Britain.
