Miscellany 2022 ~ Additional Information
The Strangers’ Resurrection of Norwich: St Peter Mancroft’s Easter Tapestry Caroline Whiting examines the turbulent times of this rare sixteenth century survival and its connections to Norwich’s Strangers community.
Footnotes
1. Frank Meeres, 1998 p. 70 quotes NEO, PD 58/38; NCR, Mayor’s Court Book 9 March 1643/4, fo. 415r.
2. David Starkey, 20123.
3. The Elizabethan Strangers were not the first to develop the textile industry in Norwich. It was established by Queen Philippa of Hainault, wife of Edward III, who sponsored Flemish weavers to settle in the city in 1331.
4. F Meeres, 1998, p. 74.
5. The Dutch and Walloon Strangers’ Book, f.16.
6. Kate Hotblack 1922 7. Dutch and Walloon Strangers’ Book 1564-1643, f. 21. Norwich Archive.
8. To safeguard the local workforce, the Strangers were restricted to selling to Norwich citizens, enabling Norwich merchants to profit by selling on in London.
9. State Paper of 1575
10. The Walloons at St Mary the Less, in present day Queen’s Street, while the Dutch used a chapel in Blackfriars Hall.
11. As prescribed by the Heidelberg catechism
12. Andrew Spicer, 2016, p. 176
13. The thirteen Gideon tapestries at Hardwick Hall (c.1590) for example each measure 7m x 6m.
14. https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/goldenlegend/ 15. Jacobus De Voragine, 1275.
16. F Meeres, 2018, p. 45-46
17. F Meeres, 2018, p. 46 A quote from the presentation speech delivered in Latin to the Queen by Hermanus Moded, the Flemish preacher.
18. Around 3,000 of the c. 6,000 plague victims; they mostly lived at close quarters in the poorer districts.
Bibliography
Thomas P Campbell, ‘European Tapestry Production And Patronage, 1400-1600’. Department Of European Sculpture And Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum Of Art, October 2002.
Alastair Duke, ‘Eavesdropping on the Correspondence between the Strangers, Chiefly in Norwich, and their Families in the Low Countries 1567-70.’ Dutch Crossing Journal of Low Countries Studies, Vol 38 No 2, July, 116-312014
Ruth Duthie, Florists’ Flowers And Societies, Shire Publications, Aylesbury, 1988.
S MA Hope, Inventories of the Parish Church of St Peter Mancroft, Norwich. NNAS Vol 14, Part 2, 1899.
Kate Hotblack, ‘The Dutch and Walloons At Norwich.’ History, Vol. 6, No. 24, 1922, 234–239. www.jstor. Org/Stable/24399246, accessed 23 June 2021.
Helen Hoyte, The Strangers Of Norwich, Red Herring Publishing, Aylsham, 2017.
Scot Mckendrick, ‘Tapestries from The Low Countries and England During The Late Middle Ages’ in England And The Low Countries In The Late Middle Ages, eds. Nigel Saul and CM Barron, C. M., Alan Sutton Publishing, Stroud, 1995.
Frank Meeres, A History of Norwich, Phillimore & Co Ltd, Chichester, 1998.
Frank Meeres, Strangers, A History of Norwich’s Incomers, Norwich HEART, Norwich, 2012.
Frank Meeres, The Welcome Stranger, Dutch, Walloon and Huguenot Incomers To Norwich 1550-1750, The Lasse Press, Norwich, 2018.
Norwich Record Office: Book Of Orders For Dutch And Walloon Strangers (NRO, NCR 17d/9).
Wjc Moenes, ‘The Walloons And Their Church In Norwich At Norwich’, Lymington, 1887-8.
Nigel Saul and CM Barron, eds. England And the Low Countries in The Late Middle Ages, Alan Sutton Publishing, Stroud, 1995.
Andrew Spicer, 2016. ‘The Huguenots and Art c. 1560-1685’ in A Companion to the Huguenots. Raymond A Mentzer and Bertrand Van Rumbeke eds. Brill, Leiden, 1995.
David Starkey, Maria Hayward and Phillip Ward, eds. The Inventory of King Henry VIII. Volume II: Textiles and Dress, Harvey Miller Publishers for the Society of Antiquaries, 2012.
Jacobus De Voragine, The Golden Legend (Aurea Legenda or Lives of the Saints), 1275. First Edition Published 1470. Trans. William Caxton, First Edition 1483, Edited by F.S. Ellis, Temple Classics, 1900 (Reprinted 1922, 1931.)
https://Sourcebooks.Fordham.Edu/Basis/Goldenlegend/ (accessed 25th June 21)
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-hist-norfolk/vol3/pp277-360#p326, (accessed 8th June 2022)
https://norfolktalesmyths.com/tag/walloons/, (accessed 8th June 2022)
The Strangers’ Resurrection of Norwich: St Peter Mancroft’s Easter Tapestry Caroline Whiting examines the turbulent times of this rare sixteenth century survival and its connections to Norwich’s Strangers community.
Footnotes
1. Frank Meeres, 1998 p. 70 quotes NEO, PD 58/38; NCR, Mayor’s Court Book 9 March 1643/4, fo. 415r.
2. David Starkey, 20123.
3. The Elizabethan Strangers were not the first to develop the textile industry in Norwich. It was established by Queen Philippa of Hainault, wife of Edward III, who sponsored Flemish weavers to settle in the city in 1331.
4. F Meeres, 1998, p. 74.
5. The Dutch and Walloon Strangers’ Book, f.16.
6. Kate Hotblack 1922 7. Dutch and Walloon Strangers’ Book 1564-1643, f. 21. Norwich Archive.
8. To safeguard the local workforce, the Strangers were restricted to selling to Norwich citizens, enabling Norwich merchants to profit by selling on in London.
9. State Paper of 1575
10. The Walloons at St Mary the Less, in present day Queen’s Street, while the Dutch used a chapel in Blackfriars Hall.
11. As prescribed by the Heidelberg catechism
12. Andrew Spicer, 2016, p. 176
13. The thirteen Gideon tapestries at Hardwick Hall (c.1590) for example each measure 7m x 6m.
14. https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/goldenlegend/ 15. Jacobus De Voragine, 1275.
16. F Meeres, 2018, p. 45-46
17. F Meeres, 2018, p. 46 A quote from the presentation speech delivered in Latin to the Queen by Hermanus Moded, the Flemish preacher.
18. Around 3,000 of the c. 6,000 plague victims; they mostly lived at close quarters in the poorer districts.
Bibliography
Thomas P Campbell, ‘European Tapestry Production And Patronage, 1400-1600’. Department Of European Sculpture And Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum Of Art, October 2002.
Alastair Duke, ‘Eavesdropping on the Correspondence between the Strangers, Chiefly in Norwich, and their Families in the Low Countries 1567-70.’ Dutch Crossing Journal of Low Countries Studies, Vol 38 No 2, July, 116-312014
Ruth Duthie, Florists’ Flowers And Societies, Shire Publications, Aylesbury, 1988.
S MA Hope, Inventories of the Parish Church of St Peter Mancroft, Norwich. NNAS Vol 14, Part 2, 1899.
Kate Hotblack, ‘The Dutch and Walloons At Norwich.’ History, Vol. 6, No. 24, 1922, 234–239. www.jstor. Org/Stable/24399246, accessed 23 June 2021.
Helen Hoyte, The Strangers Of Norwich, Red Herring Publishing, Aylsham, 2017.
Scot Mckendrick, ‘Tapestries from The Low Countries and England During The Late Middle Ages’ in England And The Low Countries In The Late Middle Ages, eds. Nigel Saul and CM Barron, C. M., Alan Sutton Publishing, Stroud, 1995.
Frank Meeres, A History of Norwich, Phillimore & Co Ltd, Chichester, 1998.
Frank Meeres, Strangers, A History of Norwich’s Incomers, Norwich HEART, Norwich, 2012.
Frank Meeres, The Welcome Stranger, Dutch, Walloon and Huguenot Incomers To Norwich 1550-1750, The Lasse Press, Norwich, 2018.
Norwich Record Office: Book Of Orders For Dutch And Walloon Strangers (NRO, NCR 17d/9).
Wjc Moenes, ‘The Walloons And Their Church In Norwich At Norwich’, Lymington, 1887-8.
Nigel Saul and CM Barron, eds. England And the Low Countries in The Late Middle Ages, Alan Sutton Publishing, Stroud, 1995.
Andrew Spicer, 2016. ‘The Huguenots and Art c. 1560-1685’ in A Companion to the Huguenots. Raymond A Mentzer and Bertrand Van Rumbeke eds. Brill, Leiden, 1995.
David Starkey, Maria Hayward and Phillip Ward, eds. The Inventory of King Henry VIII. Volume II: Textiles and Dress, Harvey Miller Publishers for the Society of Antiquaries, 2012.
Jacobus De Voragine, The Golden Legend (Aurea Legenda or Lives of the Saints), 1275. First Edition Published 1470. Trans. William Caxton, First Edition 1483, Edited by F.S. Ellis, Temple Classics, 1900 (Reprinted 1922, 1931.)
https://Sourcebooks.Fordham.Edu/Basis/Goldenlegend/ (accessed 25th June 21)
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-hist-norfolk/vol3/pp277-360#p326, (accessed 8th June 2022)
https://norfolktalesmyths.com/tag/walloons/, (accessed 8th June 2022)