. Social England; a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . e, Aud cki liohiiul on lier ccilore about. Of cole-blaek sjlke witliiu ami eke without. For the garment which we have hitherto distinguished as thecote, a number of alternative names are found. These may denotesome slight variety of form or merely a difference of the palfuii-, of which we know little for certain beyond itsname, is probably of Spanish origin. Of a few others .somethingmore certai


. Social England; a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature and manners, from the earliest times to the present day . e, Aud cki liohiiul on lier ccilore about. Of cole-blaek sjlke witliiu ami eke without. For the garment which we have hitherto distinguished as thecote, a number of alternative names are found. These may denotesome slight variety of form or merely a difference of the palfuii-, of which we know little for certain beyond itsname, is probably of Spanish origin. Of a few others .somethingmore certain can be said. The jark was, at least in England,a military garment, a loose coat or tunic of the gambeson kind,made of jacked leather, and often stitched and quilted. Thejacket, a garment of civil life, was a little jack, a short bodygarment. In the middle of tlie fourteenth ccntuiy Fmissartipeaks of •uno simple cotte ou jaquette, which his translator,Lord Berners, renders by a sj-ngle ( imlined) jacket. Again, llans was the (ierman equivalent for Jack. Hence thehansdinr already mentioned would be the little jack or thejacket. In the same connection may be mentioned the later.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidsocialenglan, bookyear1902