Abstract
The article examines the arrangements for the ongoing care of the royal tapestries under Queen Elizabeth, based on the continuous series of accounts for the arras men found in the National Archives LC 9, AO 3 and E 351. Taken on ‘at need’, the men worked a variable number of days per year in the Great Wardrobe, south of St Paul’s. The majority were émigré tapestry weavers resident in London, though a gradually increasing number of Englishmen entered service. An attempt is made to identify tapestries repaired or sent to an external firm for ‘refreshing’ and ‘cleansing’. Transcripts of the accounts are available on the National Archives web site, Your Archives.
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Hilary L Turner
Hilary Turner worked as a freelance researcher after completing a doctorate at Oxford. Always fascinated by puzzles from the past, she came to tapestry after seeing the tapestry map of Warwickshire, once the property of Ralph Sheldon. She has since investigated, and published, the story behind their weaving, and looked at the reality of the family’s attempt to introduce tapestry weaving into sixteenth-century Warwickshire.