2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0424.2009.01539.x
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A Marginal Occupation? The Medieval Laundress and her Work

Abstract: Drawing upon a wide range of primary sources, this article argues that a study of the medieval laundress can illuminate wider social attitudes to hygiene as well as to low status women. Having considered the many types of laundry workers active in England and northern France between c.1300 and 1550, it examines the techniques they used, as well as the hazards encountered through exposure to difficult conditions. Such factors, along with the freedom of movement enjoyed by many laundresses, often harmed their co… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Open spaces could facilitate encounter and the emergence of communities. Carole Rawcliffe (2009) describes how areas of European cities were set aside for the laundering of clothes and, as such, became sites for the negotiation and maintenance of gendered and professional identities, becoming, simultane-…”
Section: Urban Encountersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Open spaces could facilitate encounter and the emergence of communities. Carole Rawcliffe (2009) describes how areas of European cities were set aside for the laundering of clothes and, as such, became sites for the negotiation and maintenance of gendered and professional identities, becoming, simultane-…”
Section: Urban Encountersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Woolgar 1999; Gee 2002; Nolan 2009; Martin 2012; Moss 2012; Jasperse 2017; Delman 2019). Key themes addressed in these cognate disciplines are sponsorship (patronage) and religious devotion among elite women, while non-elites, such as washerwomen, maidservants, midwives and prostitutes, feature somewhat less (Rawcliffe 2009; Müller 2013). These disciplines, however, still show an explicit awareness of the complex ways in which medieval people constructed their identities.…”
Section: Gender and Medieval Archaeology In Britain And Irelandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…45 Since grooming, therefore, represents non-natural therapy, laundresses were agents for the maintenance of health. 46 Washing linen does not necessitate direct contact with the body, but the laundresses at Acre apparently washed the other crusaders' heads, too. Not only this, but Ambroise states that they 'were as good as monkeys at delousing' (d'espucer valeient singes).…”
Section: Medicinementioning
confidence: 99%