An expanded version of this article,
complete with a pattern for making your own sixteenth century leine, can be
found in the book, Early Highland Dress,
by Matthew A. C. Newsome.
Spiral Bound Paperback for $15.95
Now available on CD-ROM (Adobe
software included) for $12.95
The original garment of the Gael, both in
the Scottish Highlands as well as in Ireland, was the leine. The word
“leine” can be and has been translated from the Gaelic as “shirt” as well
as “tunic.” As the word “shirt” has connotations as an undergarment
in Elizabethan times, and the leine was not an undergarment, we will use
the term “tunic” here.
The majority of information used in this presentation
can be found in the book Old Irish and Highland Dress by H. F. McClintock.
This book contains more primary source documentation for Gaelic clothing (Ireland
and Scotland as well as some on the Isle of Man) for early periods than
any other source. It is a must read for anyone serious in the study
of the Gaelic dress. It was originally published in 1943 by Dundalgan
Press in Scotland, but had been long out of print and copies were hard to
come by. Fortunately for us, it has been recently put back in print
by Scotpress, here in the United States.
Throughout the early and medieval periods,
the Scottish Gaels maintained various levels of contact with their Irish brethren.
The Scots themselves migrated to the land known as Scotland from Ireland
in the 5th and 6th centuries AD. The leine remained their common garment
throughout our period, although fashions did of course change. We know
the most about this tunic from the 16th century, and we will focus on that
era in our discourse. But we shall first have a look at what the early
Irish sources can show us as to the origins of this garment.
THE EARLY IRISH LEINE
There is no better way to introduce the early
leine than with McClintock’s opening paragraph, which I quote below:
As a starting point I cannot do better than take a passage
from Professor Macalister’s Muiredach Abbot of Monasterboice, in which
he says . . . that in ancient times the two main garments worn by persons
of importance in Ireland were a long close-fitting smock, for which the Irish
word was léine, and an outer mantle thrown over it which in
Irish was called brat. He illustrates this by a quotation from
one of the early romances relating to pre-Christian times, “The Wooing of
Ferb,” and adds that the general details of this dress lasted right down to
the 16th century, instancing Dürer’s drawing of “Irish soldiers and poor
men” painted in 1521.
This basic mode of dress can be attested to by the stone carvings found
on the Cross of Muiredach. In this carving of three men, the leine
can be seen as a long tunic with a narrow skirt, and a band of what appears
to be embroidery or embroidered trim around the bottom. The central
figure appears to be a man of some importance, and is wearing his leine full
length to his ankles. McClintock notes that men in action are
often shown with the leine pulled up around their thighs. In another
carving on the cross, a priest is shown in a long leine with a decorated
hem, and a warrior with a belt worn outside his leine, which is drawn up
to his knees. On a third carving on the same cross, Cain and Abel are
depicted as wearing some sort of loin cloth. McClintock suggests, due
to the embroidered hem as seen on the leines above, that these are also leinte
(the Gaelic plural of leine), the upper part of which has been cast off.
The first figure mentioned seems to suggest a neck opening large enough to
allow this.
The Book of Kells, written no earlier than 800
AD, is another source of information for Irish clothing, but it has to be
used with caution as most of the human figures pictured are very stylized.
Many do show the leine, however, in the form that we expect it. The
pictures here are clearer than the stone carvings and show us that the leine
definitely did not open down the front and was instead put on over the head
like a smock. On the ones pictured, the opening at the neck is rather
high with a shallow V shape. The sleeves are all of normal width.
Although it is difficult to come to too many
conclusions about Irish dress from this period, it seems to be the consensus
of the scholars that the leine costume was that of the aristocracy, or at
least those with some authority, in the 10th century and before. In
this time, we do find another form of dress, however—that of the tight fitting
trews, worn with a jacket. We never see the leine and trews being worn
together, though (at least not at this early period). One theory put
forth that has met with some acceptance is that the trews, which are similar
to other northern European garments, belonged to the native Irish.
When the conquering Gaels came in sometime before 300 BC, they brought with
them their looser fitting clothing, the leine or tunic. These people
conquered and ruled over the indigenous people much the same way the Normans
ruled over the Anglo-Saxons. Even though the conquered race eventually
spoke the Gaelic language and called themselves by the same name, it was
the upper class who wore the leine and the common man retained the native
garb.
THE LEINE IN 16TH CENTURY IRELAND
English writers of the 16th century commonly refer
to the pleated saffron shirt, and we find much contemporary Irish evidence
to support this. The earliest drawing we have of Irish men from this
century is not Irish, however, but was done by a German artist named Dürer
in 1521. His picture is of five Irish soldiers presumably met on a
stay in the Low Countries. One is wearing an acton (“cotun” in Irish),
a type of padded cloth armor, but the other four are dressed in long tunics
that reach midway between the ankle and knees. McClintock notes how
similar these tunics appear to the ones of the 10th and 11th centuries discussed
earlier, with the exception that at least two are open in the front like a
dressing gown.
Next we shall look at a woodcut from around 1550
of Irish men (perhaps soldiers or prisoners of war) all wearing long tunics
with very wide, hanging sleeves, and short jackets called ionar. Since
our present focus is on the leine we are most interested in their tunics.
In this illustration they are definitely closed in the front and must be pulled
over the head like a smock. They are belted at the waist and then drawn
up so that the hem is about the knees and the slack hangs in what McClintock
calls “a bag-like mass” around their waist. He also suggests that this
was used as a pocket. The sleeves are narrow at the body and wide at
the wrist. McClintock draws similarity between these and the wide sleeves
of 15th century English clothing, from which he suggests the Irish adopted
the fashion.
This garment is more or less identical to one pictured in a water-color
painting found in a Dutch book from 1574 entitled “Corte beschryvinghe van
Engeland, Scotland ende Ireland.”
The man in this picture is wearing the same garment in the same manner with
the added benefit that we can plainly see the yellow colouring of the saffron
dye.
There is another 16th century source that we must
look at called “Image of Ireland” written by a man named Derricke in 1581.
Several drawings of Irishmen are to be found in this book, some of which
show a dramatic difference from what we have previously seen.
The leinte we see still have the wide, hanging sleeves but are
open in the front and wrap around the body like a Japanese kimono or a modern
bathrobe. The skirts of the leinte are shorter, only midway between
the hip and knee, and appear pleated. These are the only pictures we
have that show the leine with a pleated skirt, but the English sources often
speak of the Irish shirts as being pleated, so we know this was not rare.
Of these leinte, Derricke writes:
Their shirtes be verie straunge,
Not reaching paste the thie:
With pleates on pleates thei pleated are
As thick as pleates may lye.
Whose sleves hang trailing doune
Almost unto the Shoe:
And with a Mantell commonlie,
The Irish Karne doe goe.
The Irish Karne, or soldier
In one of the pictures in this book a woman is shown wearing a tunic
with very wide sleeves that is no doubt a leine, only with longer skirts
than that of the men, reaching to mid-calf. This confirms the fact
that women seemed to share this garment with the men. McClintock sites
a book entitled De rebus in Hibernia gestis as describing Irish women as
“wrapped in a tunic reaching to the ankles, often saffron coloured, and long-sleeved.”
One other image from Derricke needs to be addressed briefly before we
move on. It is the central image of the seventh plate and shows a
messenger. He is very well drawn and his legs are obviously bare and the
skirts of his leine are not nearly as full or elaborate as the
others seen in this book. The assumption is that because he is a messenger,
and therefore a professional runner, that he travels light.
McClintock also cites various English descriptions
of the Irish dress, all of which confirm some or all of the description we
have seen above. Basically, from these sources we can tell how the leine
began life as a relatively simple tunic, reaching to the ankles, open at
the neck and put on over the head. The sleeves were of a normal width.
By 1521 we see the beginnings of the open-front leine, although the closed
front type is still seen. Towards the middle of the century we begin
to encounter the very wide and hanging sleeves that are so associated with
the leine. The sleeves are very similar to English and European sleeves
of the 15th century and McClintock suggests that they may in fact date from
as early as then. And we also encounter, in the latter part of the
16th century, the leine that is open in front with the sides wrapped around,
full sleeved, with a heavily pleated skirt coming down to the mid thigh.
This form, from the pictures we have, was almost exclusively worn with a
jacket (ionar) and trews. How the pleats were tailored we do
not know, but McClintock suggests the use of many gores sewn together, and
records of the time indicate that often 20 or 30 ells (yards) were used in
a single leine (this yardage would have been about 25” wide). McClintock
makes no mention of the leine in any of his sources after 1600.
A few notes about the material the leinte
were most likely made of before we move on to their use in Scotland.
Although early sources such as the Táin Bó Cúalgne mention
silk being used as a material for tunics, and in a variety of colours, all
of our 16th century sources mention linen and no other material. This
was probably a strong, thick, hand-woven linen, according to McClintock.
Also in the 16th century, the only colour mentioned is saffron or yellow.
Note, although, that many sources say simply that the shirts were “often”
or “generally” dyed with saffron, and many do not mention colour at all.
This does leave open the possibility of other colours, but it cannot be
doubted that saffron was the overwhelming favourite.
In regards to the saffron, it was apparently
so much in use that local supplies were not enough and it was also imported
from abroad. McClintock finds it among the exports to Ireland in the
Bristol books of 1504 and 1518 and in fewer quantities in 1586 and 1591.
The dye of the saffron plant, which was grown in large quantities all over
Ireland and much more in use in the 16th century than it is today, produced
a very pure yellow. Often today a shade of brownish yellow is referred
to as “saffron” but the reason for this is uncertain. The
Dutch watercolor from 1574
shows the pure yellow of the saffron color exactly, and no trace of brown
can be seen.
THE LEINE IN SCOTLAND
The primary resources for Scottish Highland dress
from the period before 1600 are much scarcer than the Irish sources.
McClintock is able to provide 10 references to Highland dress in his book.
Only one of these is from earlier than the 16th century. This is the
often quoted section from the Magnus Berfaet saga of 1093 AD. This
epic describes the journeys of King Magnus to the lands in the Western Highlands
of Scotland, and when he returned he adopted the costume he saw there:
“they went about barelegged having short tunics and also upper garments,
and so many men called him ‘Barelegged’ or ‘Barefoot.’” The word translated
as tunic is “kyrtlu” and upper garments is “yfir hafnir.” Many erroneously
claim this to be a reference to some sort of kilt, but that simply is not
the case. What is described here is most likely the same combination
of leine and brat that was worn in Ireland at the time among the Gaels there.
We certainly know from the political and social history of the Western Islands
of Scotland that much connection with Ireland was maintained.
There is a wide gap in McClintock’s work between
1093 and the 16th century that is very hard to fill in. Recently I
was made aware of the existence of a garment called the “Rogart Shirt.”
This shirt was found in a grave in Sutherland and has been dated to the
14th century. It is a very simple tunic with a single opening at the
neck (a slit that has been blanket stitched at the corners and hemmed along
the edges) and normal width sleeves pieced together from several pieces of
cloth. This was most likely done in an effort to conserve cloth as
no structural or fashionable reasons can be found. The width of the
material for the body is about 30” with the length of the body being 90”
folded over (making the length of the shirt when worn 45”). A complete
write up of this shirt with a pattern can be found on the World Wide Web
at: http://www47.pair.com/lindo/Rogart.htm
. The source for this garment was Early Textiles Found in Scotland
by Audrey S. Henshall. A complete bibliographical entry can be found
on the web page.
The next document McClintock sets before us
is John Major’s History of Greater Britain published in 1521.
He writes about the “Wild Scots”:
From the middle of the thigh to the foot they have no
covering for the leg, clothing themselves with a mantle instead of an upper
garment and a shirt dyed with saffron. . . . The common people of the Highland
(lit. ‘wild’) Scots rush into battle having their body clothed with a linen
garment manifoldly sewed and painted or daubed with pitch, with a covering
of deerskin.
The saffron shirt we can parallel with the Irish leine, but the other
linen garment mentioned needs explanation. The Latin word that was
translated as “sewed” was “suere” and could also mean pleated, patched, or
quilted. It could be pleated, as we have seen mention of Irish leine
being pleated. However, as this was a garment worn for battle, it makes
more sense if we think of it as being quilted. This would describe
a linen garment very similar to an acton. This padded armor is much
seen in stone carvings on the Isles and in the Highlands and is often mistaken
as a leine.
In 1538 we find in the Lord High Treasurer’s
accounts record of some material ordered for King James V to be made into
a Highland outfit. Among these materials were 15 ells of “Holland
claith to be syde Heland Sarkis.” This would be translated as long
Highland shirts. Also listed were quantities of silk for sewing the
shirts and ribbons for decoration. We can tell from this that the shirts
were most likely not pleated or else more material would have been needed.
Also it is interesting to note that the shirts were to be sewn with silk.
A very extensive account of the dress
comes to us from Bishop Lesley, writing in Rome in 1578. He describes
the entire outfit, but specifically of the leine he writes:
They also made of linen very large shirts, with numerous
folds and wide sleeves, which flowed abroad loosely to their knees.
These, the rich coloured with saffron and others smeared with some grease
to preserve them longer clean among the toils and exercises of a camp, which
they held it of the highest consequence to practice continually. In
the manufacture of these, ornament and a certain attention to taste
were not altogether neglected, and they joined the different parts of their
shirts very neatly with silk thread, chiefly of a red or green colour.
This seems to come closest in description to the type of leine pictured
in Derricke, and again we see the silk threads mentioned, here of a contrasting
color.
In 1556 a French writer named Jean
de Beaugue wrote an account of the siege of Haddington in 1549 in which he
describes the Scottish Highlanders who were present as wearing “no clothes
except their dyed shirts and a sort of light woolen rug of several colours.”
This again confirms the leine and brat combination common in Gaelic dress.
In 1573 Lindsay of Pitscottie wrote of the Highlanders that “they be cloathed
with ane mantle, with ane schirt saffroned after the Irish manner, going
barelegged to the knee.” In 1547 James V went on a voyage around the
north of Scotland and the Orkneys, and back down to Galloway. An account
of this voyage was published in 1583 by Nicolay D’Arfeville, cosmographer
to the King of France. He writes of the ‘Wild Scots’ found in the north,
“They wear like the Irish a large and full shirt, coloured with saffron .
. .”
Of all of these mentions of the
leine, it is almost always called “saffron” or “yellow” and if not that,
then at least “dyed.” Only one source mentions no colour. No
pictures survive for us to look at as they do in Ireland, but the similarity
in the description is obvious (even the contemporary authors noticed them).
McClintock seems of the opinion, and I would agree, that the leine varied
in Scotland as it did in Ireland. Some evidence points to them being
pleated—others make no mention, and in the case of King James’ suit, not
enough material for pleating is used. Other sources do mention up to
24 ells, so pleating there would have been likely. They are referred
to as long, below the knee, above the knee, and mid-thigh. So we can
be certain that variety did exist. And in Scotland, as with in Ireland,
no mention of the leine can be found after 1600, when the more Anglicized
style of shirt is exclusive.
No mention is made of women’s dress
in Scotland, but as the women of Ireland wore a leine similar, if not identical,
to the men, then the same should be assumed for female dress in Scotland
as well.
McClintock includes a brief section
in his book on the Isle of Man. Little can be found as to the medieval
clothing of the Manx, but since their language and culture was almost exclusively
Gaelic until after our period, one can be safe in assuming a similarity
of dress in reconstructing a Manx costume.
No patterns exist for us to go by,
but I have constructed a pattern based on the information available that is
relatively simple to sew and the end result resembles the existing pictures
we have of the leines in Ireland. For the very simple early types
of leines mentioned, any simple tunic pattern should suffice as long as it
conforms to the descriptions given. The pattern I have should be used
for 16th century leines, of the type worn in the 1550 Irish woodcut.